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Keep On Trunkin’: Free International VoIP Calling Returns
Today we’re taking a fresh look at the international calling marketplace by updating the best VoIP deals available. FreeVoipDeal once again takes the prize with the best selection of "free" international calling destinations at the lowest prices. Below we’ll provide a quick tutorial to transform your Incredible PBX server into an international calling platform at minimal cost.
Here’s How It Works. For every 10 euros ($10.72) you deposit into your account, you’ll get 300 minutes a week of free calls to a specific list of countries for 120 days. After you exhaust your free minutes, calls to the "free" countries revert to their standard VoIP rates. You can also call anywhere else in the world at very reasonable per minute rates that compare favorably with other SIP providers around the world. The beauty of a PBX and SIP trunks is you can mix and match as many providers as you like to take advantage of favorable calling rates to multiple countries. We’ll walk you through the FreeVoipDeal trunk setup below.
Betamax 101. There are a few things you need to know about the so-called Betamax VoIP services up front. Most importantly, they change rates and free countries more frequently than college kids change partners. The calling rate to some country from some Betamax provider changes almost every day because Betamax has dozens of companies offering similar services with differing rates and freebies. Here’s an very old spreadsheet that will give you a good idea of what you’re up against. Don’t depend upon it for the current rates. You’ll need to visit the actual site(s) for their current rate tables or visit this site (not) maintained by Betamax for a country-by-country comparison by provider. That’s another way of saying DON’T BLAME US IF YOUR 3-HOUR CALL TO ANTARCTICA CHANGED FROM 20¢ PER MINUTE TO $1 PER MINUTE OVERNIGHT. IT PROBABLY WON’T, BUT IT MIGHT.
One other word of warning. Some Betamax sites (marked with a red asterisk in the Betamax country table) such as powervoip.com have good calling rates, but they tack on a 3.9¢ connection fee to every call. If you make lengthy calls, it’s not a big deal. If you make numerous short calls, it drives your discount calling rates through the roof. Before making a lengthy call to a remote destination, spend the two minutes it takes to look up the current rate on the actual Betamax web site and take a snapshot of the page for your records. Here’s another tip. If you make frequent calls to Antarctica, spend a little time doing your homework. Review the latest Betamax spreadsheet to track down the cheapest rates. Then double-check the actual sites for the current rates. There’s a $100+ difference in the cost of a 3-hour call at €.20/minute from some Betamax sites versus the €.70/minute rate at some other Betamax sites. THIS OFTEN CHANGES! HINT: Don’t use FreeVoipDeal for Antarctica.
Today we’ll be focusing on the company we’ve tracked for many years, FreeVoipDeal.com. Except for the domain name, the setup with other Betamax providers is similar but not identical. And, of course, you’ll have to kick in another deposit to make free calls from each site. The length of the Freebie period also may vary so read the terms carefully. FreeVoipDeal actually hasn’t changed much since our first visit about five years ago. In fact, we still had most of our ten euro credit so we could play all we wanted even though the calls were no longer free since our four month window has long since expired.
Here’s the February 23, 2019 Freebie list by country. Don’t depend upon it! Check their actual web site or the Betamax country summary for current freebies and current rates. Here’s a great trick to remember. When you visit the FreeVoipDeal Rate Table, click on the Out of Minutes tab for a quick listing of all the Free Calling Countries as well as the rates once you’ve used up your four months or 300 weekly minutes of free calls. With few exceptions, most of the "free countries" still have a rate of 1.1¢ per minute even after you run out of minutes.
How Free International Calling Works
Placing international calls through FreeVoipDeal can be done in a number of ways. That’s the real beauty of a PBX. First, you can either load an app to make the calls if your smartphone or PC supports it. With Incredible PBX, you can use a SIP phone to dial a FreeVoipDeal number directly through your PBX, or you can dial a DISA access number or SIP URI from anywhere to connect to your PBX and then enter your DISA password after which you will get a second dial tone to place an international call using your FreeVoipDeal trunk. The beauty of the DISA approach is you can call into your PBX from any telephone to place free or dirt cheap international calls.
Using Incredible PBX 13 and DISA for Calling
On the Incredible PBX platform, you can use the DISA application to provide secondary dialtone for processing international calls. A phone number and trunk will receive incoming calls bound for DISA from your cellphone. An inbound route will only forward incoming calls to DISA that match your cellphone number. A secondary trunk from FreeVoipDeal or other providers will be used to process outgoing international calls that are dialed using DISA. We’ll create an outbound route or rule for every country to which you want to authorize international calling. Each of these outbound routes will point to the least expensive (or free) trunk to complete the call. In the VoIP world, you actually could have dozens of outbound trunks that handle international calls based upon the country codes of each international call. This lets you take advantage of the best calling rates for each country. We will block international calls to country codes not specifically authorized.
Just to restate the obvious, a misconfigured DISA application that allows the world to make international calls on your nickel can get expensive quickly. We’ll protect today’s DISA setup for Incredible PBX with three layers of protection. First, we’ll require that the CallerID of the incoming call match your cellphone number. While this isn’t failsafe since CallerID numbers can be spoofed, it does reduce the risk considerably. Second, to make DISA calls, you’ll have to know the incoming phone number or SIP URI managing DISA on your PBX. And third, you’ll have to enter the correct DISA PIN before being prompted for an international number to dial. Without all three, nobody gets to make an international call on your nickel. Just remember, compromising DISA on your PBX is just as risky as handing out your credit card to a stranger so follow the setup steps below carefully. And then TEST, TEST, TEST to make sure strangers can’t access your DISA setup. We’ll show you how.
Here’s an overview of the DISA setup drill once you have Incredible PBX running. We’ll walk through each of the six steps below. Don’t get frustrated. There are a number of steps, but none of them are difficult. Just pretend you’re baking cookies and don’t skip any steps.
- Set Up Your Trunk to Process Incoming DISA Calls
- Set Up Your Trunk(s) to Process Outgoing International Calls
- Configure DISA with a Very Secure Password
- Configure an Inbound Route to Limit Incoming DISA Calls to Your Cellphone #
- Configure an Outbound Route for Each International Country Code
- Test, Test, Test
1. Setting Up Incoming DISA Call Trunk
Before you can make calls to your PBX, it’ll need a phone number (known affectionately as a DID). As installed, Incredible PBX includes preconfigured SIP trunks from about a dozen SIP providers. All you’ll need is credentials from the company you wish to use. You can obtain a free DID here. To obtain your own SIP URI, read our tutorial.
2. Trunk Setup for International Calling
We’re going to walk you through setting up a trunk with FreeVoipDeal to handle free international calls to certain countries documented above. This may not be the best fit for you depending upon the international destinations you wish to call. Figure that out first! Then adjust the trunk settings below to match each SIP provider trunk you wish to create. There’s no limit to the number you can have. And, with most of these providers, you pay by the minute for international calls anyway so there is no harm in configuring multiple trunks to take advantage of the best rates calling the countries of your choice. The same applies to all-you-can-eat and "free" trunks except there are varying fees for using the services so you’re probably not going to want a dozen of them even if some of the calls are free after making a periodic deposit. Start with the pink and green entries on the old spreadsheet we referenced for the cheapest historical rates and then visit the actual sites and read the fine print.
To add new trunks to Incredible PBX, use a browser to access the IP address of your server. Login with the default username of admin and the password that you set when your install completed. You can change it with the admin-pw-change script in /root. Once the dashboard appears, click the Connectivity tab and choose Trunks -> Add SIP (chan_sip) Trunk.
For Trunk Name, enter FreeVoipDeal. In the Dialed Number Manipulation Rules section, add a rule for each country code you wish to activate. You can decipher the Country Code for any country at this link. For example, for the United Kingdom, you’d enter a rule like this where 44 is the Country Code and each X represents a required digit in the local area code and phone number. The trailing period means the number includes one or more additional digits. NOTE: DISA calls will not have to be prefixed with 011 to place international calls. Just enter the country code and number to be called. And, we are told that only 441, 442, and perhaps 443 calls to the U.K. are free since those are the designated landline prefixes.
If there are other countries, you wish to support with this trunk provider, you’d click Add More Dial Pattern Fields and insert an additional rule for each country following the example above. If you’ll be using this trunk to make calls in the U.S. and Canada as well, the correct Match Pattern is 1NXXNXXXXXX, and calls will need to be dialed with the 1 to avoid conflicts with international dialing.
Next, we need to enter the Outgoing Settings. For the Trunk Name, enter freevoipdeal. Clear out the entries in Peer Details section and enter the following using your actual FreeVoipDeal credentials for yourusername and yourpassword:
authuser=yourusername username=yourusername secret=yourpassword type=peer qualify=yes nat=yes insecure=port,invite host=sip.freevoipdeal.com fromdomain=sip.freevoipdeal.com dtmfmode=auto disallow=all canreinvite=no allow=alaw&ulaw
Finally, clear out the default entries in User Details and click the Submit Changes button and then red Apply Config button to save your new trunk.
Spoofing Your CallerID. When setting up your FreeVoipDeal account, you can set up one or more numbers to use as your CallerID number on FreeVoipDeal calls. You simply verify the number with a code sent by SMS or phone call from their service. Once you’ve gone through the verification procedure, you can spoof the outbound CallerID on FreeVoipDeal calls using your actual cellphone number. Just add the following entries to your Trunk settings replacing 9991234567 with your cellphone number. Special thanks to @hillclimber on the PIAF Forum for the tip.
fromuser=0019991234567 sendrpid=yes
3. Configuring DISA for International Calling
In the Incredible PBX GUI, we’ll set up DISA by clicking the Applications tab and choosing DISA. Add your new DISA configuration by following this sample. Use a VERY secure password. It’s your phone bill. Once you’ve finished, click the Submit Changes button and then the Apply Config button to save your new DISA setup.
4. Inbound Routing of DISA Calls
Here’s where we lock down your setup so that Incredible PBX only accepts DISA calls from your cellphone number. If you want to allow additional people to use your DISA setup or if you have multiple cellphones, then simply create multiple inbound routes with the 10-digit numbers of each phone to be supported.
In the Incredible PBX GUI, we’ll set up a new Inbound Route by clicking the Connectivity tab and choosing Inbound Routes. If you plan to support multiple phones, then create multiple inbound routes and give each of them a unique Description and CallerID Number that matches the phone number of the cellphone to be supported. Be sure to check the CID Priority Route checkbox and set the correct Destination for your incoming calls. Just fill in the blanks appropriately using this template as a guide. Once you’ve finished, click the Submit button and then the Apply Config button to save your new Inbound Route.
5. Outbound Routing by Country Code
The DISA application is going to obtain the phone number to be dialed and will pass that to the Outbound Routes module. The job of the Outbound Routes module is to examine the phone number passed to it from DISA to figure out which trunk to use to make the outbound call. It then will pass the call to the appropriate trunk which sends the outgoing call on its way to the destination.
For each Dialed Number Manipulation Rule in every Trunk that you set up in Step #2 above, you’ll need a matching Outbound Route if your PBX is used to place calls using multiple trunks. If you’re only using one provider for all of your outbound calls, then we can use a more generic Outbound Route. It’s always a good idea to create the one-to-one match between Outbound Routes and Trunks to make certain that outbound calls are sent to the correct Trunk for processing. So let’s do that using the U.K. trunk we created above.
In the Incredible PBX GUI, we’ll set up a new Outbound Route by clicking the Connectivity tab and choosing Outbound Routes. When the template appears, notice in the far right column that there’s a listing of all your existing Outbound Routes. Calls are actually processed sequentially using the order that these Outbound Routes appear in the list. If there’s no number match in the top route, processing drops to the next route in the list until there is a match AND a successful connection. You can adjust the sequence by dragging the Outbound Routes to a different position in the priority list.
It’s important to use specificity in your Outbound Routes (especially with International calling) to make certain that a call isn’t inadvertently processed by some other trunk. The easiest way to do this is to require the Outbound Route Match Pattern for U.K. calls to be at least 11 digits, e.g. 44XXXXXXXX. (the trailing period is important in that it requires at least one more digit for a match). And we can force a Hangup if the FreeVoipDeal trunk is not available for some reason by adjusting the Destination on Congestion setting. This keeps the call routing from dropping down to the next available Outbound Route in the list if FreeVoipDeal happens to be off-line at some point. So our Outbound Route for U.K. calls should look something like this:
The final step is to move the new Outbound Route for U.K. calls to the top of the Outbound Routes listing in the right column to assure that it is processed first. Once you’ve done that, click the Submit Changes button and then the Apply Config button to save your new Outbound Route AND the adjusted Outbound Route Priority List.
Another alternative in creating Outbound Routes is to use a Dial Prefix that never matches a real phone number to direct calls to a particular trunk. For example, you might use *8 as a dial prefix for FreeVoipDeal calls. By placing *8 in the Prefix column of the Dial Pattern, it will get stripped off before the number is actually passed to the FreeVoipDeal trunk for processing. We actually prefer this setup because it adds an additional layer of security for international calls. If someone were to break into your DISA application by knowing your cellphone number AND your DID AND your DISA password, it’s unlikely they’d also know to prefix outgoing international calls with some arbitrary dial prefix. Just don’t use *8 in case they’re a Nerd Vittles reader. 😉
6. Test, Test, Test!
The easiest way to test the new setup is to place a couple of calls and to watch the Asterisk CLI (asterisk -rvvvvvvvvvv) and see how the calls are processed and who answers at the other end. Then you can apologize for reaching the wrong number.
You can make up your own test methodology, but here’s one that works for us. There are several tests you need to make. First, call your Incredible PBX DID from your authorized cellphone and enter a correct DISA password to see if you get dial tone to make an international call. Then repeat the drill with an invalid password and make sure you don’t get a dial tone. Next, call your Incredible PBX DID from a phone other than your authorized cellphone. You should not get a prompt for a DISA password. Finally, we use the first three digits of a U.K. number to identify a matching NANPA area code. Then, we find hotels in the two matching cities. For example, one might attempt to call a hotel in Bath, England (44 1… ……) and a hotel in Bermuda (441-…-….). The U.K. call should go through, and the Bermuda call should fail. If you pass all three tests with flying colors, you’re good to go.
Using FreeVoipDeal’s MobileVoIP App
FreeVoipDeal also offers a MobileVoIP app that can be used directly on your smartphone (Android, iOS, and Windows phone versions available) using any Wi-Fi, UMTS, 4G/LTE, 3G, GPRS or EDGE connection. The drawback is the lack of the three extra layers of security protection that Incredible PBX using DISA offers. MobileVOIP lets you log in with your registered Betamax credentials and offers the option to use your existing VoIP credit from your smartphone. The downside is that anyone with the app and your credentials can call anywhere and talk for as long as they like on your nickel using any of your registered CallerIDs. You’ve been warned. For more information or to download the app for your mobile device, go here. Remember to dial the "+1″ country code prefix for U.S./Canada calls.
Originally published: Monday, April 24, 2017 Updated: Monday, February 25, 2019
Support Issues. With any application as sophisticated as this one, you’re bound to have questions. Blog comments are a terrible place to handle support issues although we welcome general comments about our articles and software. If you have particular support issues, we encourage you to get actively involved in the PBX in a Flash Forums. It’s the best Asterisk tech support site in the business, and it’s all free! Please have a look and post your support questions there. Unlike some forums, ours is extremely friendly and is supported by literally hundreds of Asterisk gurus and thousands of users just like you. You won’t have to wait long for an answer to your question.
Need help with Asterisk? Visit the VoIP-info Forum.
Special Thanks to Our Generous Sponsors
FULL DISCLOSURE: ClearlyIP, Skyetel, Vitelity, DigitalOcean, Vultr, VoIP.ms, 3CX, Sangoma, TelecomsXchange and VitalPBX have provided financial support to Nerd Vittles and our open source projects through advertising, referral revenue, and/or merchandise. As an Amazon Associate and Best Buy Affiliate, we also earn from qualifying purchases. We’ve chosen these providers not the other way around. Our decisions are based upon their corporate reputation and the quality of their offerings and pricing. Our recommendations regarding technology are reached without regard to financial compensation except in situations in which comparable products at comparable pricing are available from multiple sources. In this limited case, we support our sponsors because our sponsors support us.
BOGO Bonaza: Enjoy state-of-the-art VoIP service with a $10 credit and half-price SIP service on up to $500 of Skyetel trunking with free number porting when you fund your Skyetel account. No limits on number of simultaneous calls. Quadruple data center redundancy. $25 monthly minimum spend required. Tutorial and sign up details are here.
The lynchpin of Incredible PBX 2020 and beyond is ClearlyIP components which bring management of FreePBX modules and SIP phone integration to a level never before available with any other Asterisk distribution. And now you can configure and reconfigure your new Incredible PBX phones from the convenience of the Incredible PBX GUI.
VitalPBX is perhaps the fastest-growing PBX offering based upon Asterisk with an installed presence in more than 100 countries worldwide. VitalPBX has generously provided a customized White Label version of Incredible PBX tailored for use with all Incredible PBX and VitalPBX custom applications. Follow this link for a free test drive!
Special Thanks to Vitelity. Vitelity is now Voyant Communications and has halted new registrations for the time being. Our special thanks to Vitelity for their unwavering financial support over many years and to the many Nerd Vittles readers who continue to enjoy the benefits of their service offerings. We will keep everyone posted on further developments.
Some Recent Nerd Vittles Articles of Interest…
Big Kahuna: 70 New FreePBX GPL Modules for Incredible PBX
We don’t change the mix of FreePBX® GPL modules in Incredible PBX® 13-13 often although you can easily add or update any of particular interest at any time using the gpl-install scripts included in the distribution. So we’re excited to introduce the 2019 collection of 70 FreePBX GPL modules for those that want to keep their Asterisk® PBX platform loaded with the latest and greatest. We’ve included a batch installer which means ALL of the existing modules get updated with the latest releases from GitHub. Depending upon the speed of your Internet connection, it’s a 5 or 10-minute procedure. Schedule it for a time when the PBX is idle.
Upgrading the FreePBX GPL Modules
The upgrade procedure couldn’t be easier. Log into your server as root. We recommend you make a backup first using the incrediblebackup script in /root. Next, make sure you have at least 50MB of free disk space: df -h
. Then issue these commands and have a cup of coffee:
cd /tmp wget http://incrediblepbx.com/modules13.tar.gz tar zxvf modules13.tar.gz rm -f modules13.tar.gz cd modules13 ./update-modules.sh
When you return, your Incredible PBX 13-13 server will be all shiny and new. You can review the license terms for each module by referencing the table below and calling up the GPL license provisions with a browser pointed to http://server-IP/admin/licenses.
FreePBX GPL Modules Documentation
The FreePBX Dev Team has generously provided excellent documentation for all of the modules. We have arranged them in the same order as the GUI’s menus for ease of use.
Admin Modules
Administrators Module
Asterisk CLI Module
Asterisk Phonebook Module
Backup and Restore Module
Blacklist Module
Bulk Handler
CID Superfecta
CallerID Lookup Sources
Certificate Management Module
Config Edit
Custom Destinations Module
Custom Extensions Module
Feature Codes Module
Module Admin Module
Phone Restart Module
Presence State Module
REST API
Sound Languages
System Recordings Module
User Management Module
Applications Modules
Announcements Module
Call Flow Control Module
Call Recording Module
Callback Module
Conferences Module
DISA Module
Directory Module
Extensions Module
Follow Me Module
IVR Module
Languages Module
Misc Applications Module
Misc Destinations Module
Paging and Intercom Module
Parking Module
Queue Priorities Module
Queues Module
Ring Groups Module
Set CallerID Module
Text to Speech Module
Time Conditions Module
Time Groups Module
Voicemail Blasting Module
Wakeup Calls Module
Connectivity Modules
DAHDI Channel DIDs
Inbound Routes Module
OSS End Point Manager (Disabled)
Outbound Routes Module
Trunks Module
Dashboard
Reports Modules
Asterisk Info Module
Asterisk Logfiles
CDR Reports Module
Call Event Logging (CEL) Module
Print Extensions
Rest API Report
Weak Password Detection
Settings Modules
Advanced Settings
Asterisk IAX Settings
Asterisk Logfile Settings
Asterisk Manager Interface
Asterisk SIP Settings
Extension Settings
Fax Configuration
Music on Hold Module
Pin Sets
Route Congestion Messages
Text to Speech Engines Module
Voicemail Admin
Third Party Addons
UCP
Installing OSS Endpoint Manager
If you have dozens of SIP phones to configure, then you’ll appreciate Andrew Nagy’s terrific OSS Endpoint Manager Module. Here’s how to install it once your Incredible PBX 13-13 server is updated with the new modules above:
cd / wget http://incrediblepbx.com/epm.tar.gz tar zxvf epm.tar.gz ./install-epm.sh
You will also need to install and configure a TFTP server. Here’s the CentOS procedure:
cd /root wget http://incrediblepbx.com/setup-tftp chmod +x setup-tftp ./setup-tftp
Pay particular attention to the firewall instructions which display at the end of the TFTP install procedure. Complete documentation for OSS Endpoint Manager is available here. Enjoy!
Originally published: Monday, February 18, 2019
Need help with Asterisk? Visit the VoIP-info Forum.
Special Thanks to Our Generous Sponsors
FULL DISCLOSURE: ClearlyIP, Skyetel, Vitelity, DigitalOcean, Vultr, VoIP.ms, 3CX, Sangoma, TelecomsXchange and VitalPBX have provided financial support to Nerd Vittles and our open source projects through advertising, referral revenue, and/or merchandise. As an Amazon Associate and Best Buy Affiliate, we also earn from qualifying purchases. We’ve chosen these providers not the other way around. Our decisions are based upon their corporate reputation and the quality of their offerings and pricing. Our recommendations regarding technology are reached without regard to financial compensation except in situations in which comparable products at comparable pricing are available from multiple sources. In this limited case, we support our sponsors because our sponsors support us.
BOGO Bonaza: Enjoy state-of-the-art VoIP service with a $10 credit and half-price SIP service on up to $500 of Skyetel trunking with free number porting when you fund your Skyetel account. No limits on number of simultaneous calls. Quadruple data center redundancy. $25 monthly minimum spend required. Tutorial and sign up details are here.
The lynchpin of Incredible PBX 2020 and beyond is ClearlyIP components which bring management of FreePBX modules and SIP phone integration to a level never before available with any other Asterisk distribution. And now you can configure and reconfigure your new Incredible PBX phones from the convenience of the Incredible PBX GUI.
VitalPBX is perhaps the fastest-growing PBX offering based upon Asterisk with an installed presence in more than 100 countries worldwide. VitalPBX has generously provided a customized White Label version of Incredible PBX tailored for use with all Incredible PBX and VitalPBX custom applications. Follow this link for a free test drive!
Special Thanks to Vitelity. Vitelity is now Voyant Communications and has halted new registrations for the time being. Our special thanks to Vitelity for their unwavering financial support over many years and to the many Nerd Vittles readers who continue to enjoy the benefits of their service offerings. We will keep everyone posted on further developments.
Adding SIP URI Dialing to Asterisk for Free Worldwide Calling
Since giving up on Google Voice, we’ve been extolling the virtues of SIP URI dialing which gives you unlimited free calls to anyone else in the world that happens to have their own SIP URI address. SIP URIs look very much like email addresses except they’re used to share phone conversations instead of email messages. And, as we’ve mentioned previously, if everyone in the world had their own SIP URI, paying for phone calls would become a thing of the past. We hope you’ll join us in making that happen. As a fallback, give our $50 credit at Skyetel a try.
One of the drawbacks of Asterisk® PBXs using the FreePBX® GUI has been the inability to place outbound SIP URI calls from SIP phones registered as extensions on the PBX. Today we first want to address that shortcoming. Our SIP URI dialing solution for Asterisk should work with any FreePBX-based implementation including Incredible PBX® and Issabel as well as on Raspberry Pi platforms. We’ll wrap things up by providing some tips on obtaining and deploying your own SIP URI at little or no cost and pointing you to some excellent resources that facilitate calling millions of SIP phones around the world at zero cost. All you need is an Internet connection, and we’ll point you to a terrific softphone to begin your adventure.
Let’s begin by examining why SIP URI dialing is a problem with FreePBX. The reason is pretty simple. FreePBX interprets dial strings by matching them against some rules to determine whether you’re making an internal call or a call outside your PBX. It matches internal calls against a list of available internal extensions. External calls are matched against rules defined in your outbound routes which are associated with trunks. Since SIP URI calls don’t match any extension or outbound route, the caller receives a congestion tone.
The traditional workaround has been to define a custom extension using the FreePBX GUI which points to a SIP URI. Then the user can dial the custom extension, and the call will be routed to the defined SIP URI. These custom extensions also can be defined in extensions_custom.conf within the from-internal-custom context. For example, the following dialplan code would let users dial 411 to reach AT&T’s Toll-Free Directory Assistance: exten => 411,1,18005551212@switch.starcompartners.com
.
But there’s a better way. Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to dial any SIP URI from a softphone or to store SIP URI addresses in the phonebook of your SIP phone?1 Well, now you can. Before we actually put the dialplan code in place, let us explain how this will work. First, FreePBX still needs to be able to distinguish a SIP URI call from a "regular call." The reason this gets tricky is because Asterisk typically throws away the destination hostname when you place a call. For example, calls to 8005551212 and 8005551212@sip2sip.info are processed by Asterisk in exactly the same way, i.e. dropping the host address before dialing.
Using the new dialplan code in the next section, here’s how calls will be processed:
User dials Asterisk processes call as ------------------------ --------------------------------------------- 701 internal call to local extension 701 4045551212 external call using NXXNXXXXXX outbound route 2233435945@sip2sip.info SIP URI call to Lenny by acct at sip2sip.info lennybgood@sip2sip.info SIP URI call to alias lennybgood@sip2sip.info
Cautionary Notes: Our code should work fine with any Asterisk 13 and FreePBX 13 or Incredible PBX deployment on any Linux platform; however, with servers other than Incredible PBX, make sure you have added the following entries to sip_general_custom.conf, or you can configure them in the GUI by making the changes in Settings -> Asterisk SIP Settings -> Chan SIP Settings:
srvlookup=yes allowguest=yes
You also need to test a traditional outbound call (e.g. 8005551212) immediately after you finish the install procedure. Monitor the Asterisk CLI (asterisk -rvvvvvvvvvv
) and observe the first few lines of the log after you place a call. The second line will show SIPDOMAIN which should be either the FQDN of your server or an IP address depending upon how you registered your softphone extension. The first line should display the MyDomain variable. If it is empty or doesn’t match the SIPDOMAIN entry, the outbound call will fail. To fix it, add an entry to the Asterisk database from the Asterisk CLI using syntax like the following: database put MyDomain FQDN 10.0.0.11
or database put MyDomain FQDN sip.me.com
where 10.0.0.11 or sip.me.com matches the SIPDOMAIN entry shown on the second line. Then retry your outbound call, and it should complete successfully. We’ve tested this back to the early Asterisk 11 days with FreePBX 2.11 without any problems. If your calls still fail, then you will probably need to remove the new code from your platform until you upgrade to a more current version of Asterisk and FreePBX. The code hasn’t been tested with FreePBX 14 and 15.
Finally, you may want to manually set the CallerID for your outgoing SIP URI calls. From the Asterisk CLI, issue a command for every extension from which you will be placing SIP URI calls, e.g. extension 701 syntax: database put 701 user_sipname "Nerd Uno"
Enabling SIP URI Dialing with FreePBX
To enable SIP URI dialing from phones registered with your Asterisk PBX, we’ll modify the dialplan in order to detect SIP URI dial strings entered into a softphone or retrieved from a phonebook associated with almost any SIP phone. When a SIP URI dial string is detected, we’ll send the call out as requested rather than passing the call through the outbound routes and trunks associated with your PBX. All of this dialplan code is open source and is licensed pursuant to the GPL2 license.
SECURITY ALERT: Never use the SIP URI MOD on a server with a publicly-exposed SIP port as it is possible for some nefarious individual to spoof your FQDN in the headers of a SIP packet and easily gain outbound calling access using your server’s trunk credentials.
FEB. 21 UPDATE: There was a bug in the original code which caused some internal calls to fail including calls to a DISA extension. Simply install the application again, and it will overwrite the previous version.
MAR. 5 UPDATE: A bug was discovered in previous releases that treated 911 and 933 calls as internal calls when, in fact, they should have been routed out using your outbound trunks. Simply install the application again, and it will overwrite the previous version.
MAR. 13 ALERT: This software is not compatible with the Debian, Raspbian, and Ubuntu platforms.
To begin or update your installation, log in to your PBX as root using SSH or Putty and issue these commands:
cd /tmp wget http://incrediblepbx.com/sipuri-mod.tar.gz tar zxvf sipuri-mod.tar.gz rm -f sipuri-mod.tar.gz ./install-sip-uri-mod.sh
Obtaining Your Own SIP URI
There are a number of ways to obtain your own SIP URI. Perhaps the easiest is to set up the open Incredible PBX cloud platform that we introduced several weeks ago. Then you can create as many SIP URIs as you like, and they can be used to perform any task that’s available with Asterisk. If you’re not quite ready to make that leap, a free or almost free SIP URI is available from the following sources. VoIP.ms provides a SIP URI for every subaccount you create. Just set up an internal extension number for the subaccount, and that becomes a SIP URI to connect back to your registered server or SIP phone. In the alternative, VoIP.ms will also provide you with a free iNUM DID which can be reached at the following IP address: 81.201.82.50. CallCentric provides a SIP URI matching your account number which can be reached @in.callcentric.com. CallCentric will also provide you with a free iNUM DID which can be reached at the following IP address: 81.201.82.50. LocalPhone provides the same two options as CallCentric: you can be reached by your account number @localphone.com. Or the LocalPhone-assigned iNUM DID can be reached @81.201.82.50. Then there’s pbxes.org. Your account name can be used for SIP URI access @pbxes.org. And, of course, if you’re a 3CX user, you can set up a SIP URI for each extension on your PBX. Just navigate to the Options tab of the desired extension(s) and enter a unique SIP ID for each extension. The SIP URI becomes SIPID@YOUR-3CX-FQDN. SIP URI calls to 3CX Clients on smartphones are also free! This list is not exhaustive. There are now more than 2,000 VoIP networks that support SIP URI access. Using a SIP URI dialing prefix, call any of the referenced networks @sipbbroker.com.2
Choosing a SIP Phone or Softphone
You can find dozens of recommendations for hardware-based SIP phones both on Nerd Vittles and the PIAF Forum. For today we’ll get you started with one of our favorite (free) softphones, YateClient. It’s available for almost all desktop platforms. Download YateClient from here. Run YateClient once you’ve installed it and enter the credentials for an extension on your PBX. You’ll need the IP address of your server plus your extension number and its password. Fill in the Yate Client template using the IP address of your PBX as well as your extension credentials. Click OK to save your entries.
Once the Yate softphone shows that it is registered, try a test call to Lenny using one of the following SIP URIs: 2233435945@sip2sip.info or 883510001198938@81.201.82.50. Better yet, try out a few Incredible PBX samples from the public server we previously deployed:
Yahoo News Headlines - news@demo.nerdvittles.com Weather by Zip Code - weather@demo.nerdvittles.com Directory Assistance - information@demo.nerdvittles.com Lenny for Telemarketers - lenny@demo.nerdvittles.com
Originally published: Monday, February 11, 2019
Need help with Asterisk? Visit the VoIP-info Forum.
Special Thanks to Our Generous Sponsors
FULL DISCLOSURE: ClearlyIP, Skyetel, Vitelity, DigitalOcean, Vultr, VoIP.ms, 3CX, Sangoma, TelecomsXchange and VitalPBX have provided financial support to Nerd Vittles and our open source projects through advertising, referral revenue, and/or merchandise. As an Amazon Associate and Best Buy Affiliate, we also earn from qualifying purchases. We’ve chosen these providers not the other way around. Our decisions are based upon their corporate reputation and the quality of their offerings and pricing. Our recommendations regarding technology are reached without regard to financial compensation except in situations in which comparable products at comparable pricing are available from multiple sources. In this limited case, we support our sponsors because our sponsors support us.
BOGO Bonaza: Enjoy state-of-the-art VoIP service with a $10 credit and half-price SIP service on up to $500 of Skyetel trunking with free number porting when you fund your Skyetel account. No limits on number of simultaneous calls. Quadruple data center redundancy. $25 monthly minimum spend required. Tutorial and sign up details are here.
The lynchpin of Incredible PBX 2020 and beyond is ClearlyIP components which bring management of FreePBX modules and SIP phone integration to a level never before available with any other Asterisk distribution. And now you can configure and reconfigure your new Incredible PBX phones from the convenience of the Incredible PBX GUI.
VitalPBX is perhaps the fastest-growing PBX offering based upon Asterisk with an installed presence in more than 100 countries worldwide. VitalPBX has generously provided a customized White Label version of Incredible PBX tailored for use with all Incredible PBX and VitalPBX custom applications. Follow this link for a free test drive!
Special Thanks to Vitelity. Vitelity is now Voyant Communications and has halted new registrations for the time being. Our special thanks to Vitelity for their unwavering financial support over many years and to the many Nerd Vittles readers who continue to enjoy the benefits of their service offerings. We will keep everyone posted on further developments.
- Special thanks to Olivier Adler and voip-info.org for their early work on SIP URI dialing with Asterisk. [↩]
- Some of our links refer users to sites or service providers when we find their prices are competitive for the recommended products. Nerd Vittles receives a small referral fee from these providers to help cover the costs of our blog. We never recommend particular products solely to generate commissions. [↩]
UC on Steroids: Incredible PBX for Issabel Joins the Cloud
We’re pleased to introduce the 2019 edition of Incredible PBX® for Issabel featuring new VPS cloud provider support and one-minute setup for Skyetel SIP trunking. One of the limitations of Issabel 4 has been the required use of the ISO installer to deploy Asterisk® 13. This 2019 release addresses that limitation and lets you do a fully scripted install using one of our four recommended $7 to $15 a year VPS cloud providers.
This new release includes our next generation Incredible PBX 13 platform with a preconfigured Travelin’ Man 3 firewall, additional text-to-speech engines (FLITE, GoogleTTS, PicoTTS, and IBM TTS), voice recognition with IBM’s state-of-the-art STT engine, turnkey trunks and extensions, SMS messaging, telephone reminders, turnkey fax support, an AsteriDex phone book with both voice and speed dialing, Wolfram Alpha, sample ODBC apps, and a boatload of dialplan code and AGI scripts to help anyone wanting to learn how to develop custom applications with Asterisk. This is one fantastic UC platform!
Installing Issabel on a Cloud-Based VPS Platform
If you wish to install Issabel 4 on a cloud-based OpenVZ server, here’s the drill. Start by creating a CentOS 7/64 platform. Once the platform is ready, log in to your server as root and immediately change your root password. Then execute the remaining commands in the order listed below. Don’t worry if you cannot access the Issabel web GUI when the install finishes. We’ll fix this up during the Incredible PBX install shortly. Now jump down to the Incredible PBX installation steps to continue.
passwd yum -y install wget nano wget -O - http://repo.issabel.org/issabel4-netinstall.sh | bash yum -y erase asterisk yum -y install asterisk13 reboot
Installing Issabel with Asterisk 13.22.0 from ISO
If you’re using your own hardware or a platform that lets you upload an ISO and deploy, begin by downloading the October 2, 2018 Issabel ISO from SourceForge. On the platform of your choice, install Issabel 4 specifying your Keyboard and Installation Destination with Asterisk 13 as your Software Selection. Add the Sangoma WANPIPE component if desired. Set your Root password and have a cup of coffee. After a reboot, you’ll be prompted to set your MySQL/MariaDB root password (must be passw0rd with a zero) and the admin password of your choice to login to the Issabel web GUI. Be sure to use the new October 2018 Issabel ISO for the base Issabel install. It includes support for Asterisk 13.22.0. We will update things from there as part of the new Incredible PBX install below.
Installing Issabel with VirtualBox
For those using VirtualBox, we’ve uploaded a new Issabel 4 .ova image to SourceForge which will save you some time in getting Issabel up and running. Once you’ve downloaded and installed the image in VirtualBox, you can log in as root using the default password: password. Then you can set your admin password for the Issabel GUI by running /root/admin-pw-change.
Installing Incredible PBX 13 for Issabel 4
As with all Incredible PBX builds, running the Incredible PBX installer will erase ALL of your existing Issabel configuration so start with a fresh install of Issabel.
Begin the Incredible PBX install by logging into your Issabel server as root from a desktop PC using SSH or Putty and execute the following commands:
cd /root wget http://incrediblepbx.com/IncrediblePBX13-Issabel4.sh chmod +x IncrediblePBX13-Issabel4.sh ./IncrediblePBX13-Issabel4.sh
The Travelin’ Man 3 firewall is installed and configured as part of the install. It whitelists certain IP addresses and blocks everyone else from even seeing your server on the Internet. For this reason, it is critically important that you perform the Incredible PBX install using SSH or Putty from a PC that you will use to manage your Issabel server. Otherwise, you risk locking yourself out of your own server. Whitelisted IP addresses include the Issabel server itself, the public and private IP addresses of your desktop PC, all non-routable, private LAN addresses, and the Nerd Vittles collection of recommended SIP hosting providers. You can add as many additional providers or users to the whitelist using the simple tools provided as part of the install and further documented below.
As part of the install process, you’ll be prompted during both passes to create a password for MySQL/MariaDB and an admin password for the Issabel web GUI. The MySQL password MUST be passw0rd (with a zero), or you will get a permanent mess. The admin password can be anything you like. Passwords can be updated by running /root/admin-pw-change. Many of the Incredible PBX apps depend upon this MySQL password so don’t change it. Your MySQL databases remain secure and can only be accessed on localhost or after a successful root login to your server from a whitelisted IP address.
WhiteListing IP Addresses in Fail2Ban
We also strongly recommend that you whitelist the IP addresses of computers you plan to use to access your new Issabel PBX. The reason is because Fail2Ban jails take precedence over IPtables settings. So even if your IP address has been whitelisted with IPtables using the Travelin’ Man 3 utilities, it’s still possible to lock yourself out of your server by entering the root or admin passwords incorrectly. Here’s how to avoid that. Edit /etc/fail2ban/jail.conf. Scroll down to line #50 which begins with the word "ignoreip." WhiteListed IP addresses are entered here with a space separating each entry. Once you have entered one or more addresses, save the file. Then restart Fail2Ban: service fail2ban restart
.
Introducing the (new) Travelin’ Man 3 Firewall
Issabel 4 includes an IPtables firewall component. Do NOT activate it because Incredible PBX includes its own preconfigured IPtables firewall, better known as Travelin’ Man 3. With the Issabel 4 firewall, the administrator is responsible for setting all of the firewall rules. With Travelin’ Man 3, all the heavy lifting is done for you. The design is also markedly different. Issabel 4 opens ports which you define, but it gives worldwide access to those ports by any user. Travelin’ Man 3 employs a WhiteList rather than opening ports for everyone. If you’re on the WhiteList, you get access to the limited collection of ports assigned to that IP address. If you’re not on the WhiteList, you cannot even see the Issabel PBX from the Internet. For those without remote telephones or traveling employees, this provides total protection of your server with virtually no further firewall management.
If you have remote users of your PBX or if you wish to deploy softphones on mobile devices and rely upon WiFi facilities at random locations, Travelin’ Man 3 provides several utilities to assist. If the remote users have static IP addresses, then those IP addresses can be added to the WhiteList by running /root/add-ip. Better yet, a NeoRouter VPN is provided that lets remote users access Issabel using NeoRouter private LAN addresses that already are WhiteListed as part of the installation process. These require little to no configuration with static or dynamic IP addresses even when switching between WiFi networks. For those with dynamic IP addresses and no VPN, FQDNs can be assigned using a service such as dyn.com and a dynamic DNS client can be loaded on the smartphone to keep the current IP address synchronized with the FQDN. On the Incredible PBX side, these FQDNs can be added using /root/add-fqdn, and the IP addresses will be updated automatically every 10 minutes. The final option to provide remote users the 3-digit PortKnocker codes from knock.FAQ and let them automatically whitelist their own IP addresses by running the PortKnocker client from any smartphone or Linux server. When the Issabel server detects a successful knock sequence, the source IP of the knock sequence is whitelisted until the next reload of the firewall. If an administrator prefers to allow permanent additions to the WhiteList that survive a reboot or restart of the firewall, the administrator need only run the following command one time: iptables-knock activate. WhiteListed entries can be removed using the /root/del-acct utility. Further details on the new Travelin’ Man 3 design are available here.
We have modified the security methodology to access the AsteriDex and Reminders pages in the web GUI. We have added another layer of security by requiring Apache htaccess credentials before you can access these pages on your Issabel server. What this means is you will be prompted for Apache admin credentials when you attempt to access these pages. As the last step of the Incredible PBX installation procedure, you will be asked to specify your admin password again. This becomes your Apache admin password, and we recommend keeping it the same as your Issabel password so you don’t get confused. In this way, the username admin and the admin password will be used BOTH for Apache authentication AND Issabel GUI authentication. Should you ever need to change your Issabel admin password, run /root/admin-pw-change. You will need to execute the following command to change the Apache admin password: htpasswd -c /etc/pbx/wwwpasswd admin.
Overview of Issabel 4 Configuration Steps
Almost all PBXs employ a similar design to get calls flowing in and out of your PBX. Extensions are the hooks that let phones on your PBX make a connection to the PBX. Trunks are the hooks that connect your PBX to the outside world so that you can make and receive external calls. Inbound routes tell the PBX how to route incoming calls from the outside world. Outbound routes tell the PBX which trunk providers to use for various types of outgoing calls. And trunk providers are outside businesses that let you terminate calls to telephones all over the world. They also provide phone numbers (DIDs) to you so that the rest of the world has a way to call you.
Incredible PBX for Issabel makes configuring your PBX easy enough for a fifth grader. We’ve provided two extensions (501 and 502) to give you a simple way to connect your first two phones. We’ve also provided over a dozen sample trunk setups to make it easy to set up trunks once you’ve registered with one or more providers of your choice. If you choose to use our Platinum Sponsor, Skyetel, their trunk setup is already activated and whitelisted on the Issabel platform so all you’ll need to do is collect your $50 signup credit, enter the IP address of your PBX as a Skyetel EndPoint, pick a phone number for your PBX, and point that phone number to your PBX endpoint. On the Issabel side, simply create an Inbound Route for your Skyetel calls by specifying the 11-digit phone number to associate with the inbound route. Finally, we’ll revise the Default Outbound Route to send outgoing calls out through Skyetel.
Getting Started with a $50 Skyetel Credit
To take advantage of the Nerd Vittles specials, begin by completing the Prequalification Form here. You then will be provided a link to the Skyetel site to complete your registration. Once you have registered on the Skyetel site and your account has been activated, open a support ticket and request a $50 credit for your account by referencing the Nerd Vittles special offer. Credit is limited to one per person/company/address/location. If you want to take advantage of the 10% discount on your current service, open another ticket and attach a copy of your last month’s bill. See footnote 1 for the fine print.1 If you have high call volume requirements, document these in your Prequalification Form, and we will be in touch. More details here. Effective 10/1/2023, $25/month minimum spend required.
Skyetel Endpoint Group Configuration
Unlike many VoIP providers, Skyetel does not use SIP registrations to make connections to your PBX. Instead, Skyetel utilizes Endpoint Groups to identify which servers can communicate with the Skyetel service. An Endpoint Group consists of a Name, an IP address, a UDP or TCP port for the connection, and a numerical Priority for the group. For incoming calls destined to your PBX, DIDs are associated with an Endpoint Group to route the calls to your PBX. For outgoing calls from your PBX, a matching Endpoint Group is required to authorize outbound calls through the Skyetel network. Thus, the first step in configuring the Skyetel side for use with your PBX is to set up an Endpoint Group. A typical setup for use with Incredible PBX®, Asterisk®, or FreePBX® would look like the following:
- Name: Issabel
- Priority: 1
- IP Address: Issabel-Public-IP-Address
- Port: 5060
- Protocol: UDP
- Description: issabel.incrediblepbx.com
Skyetel DID Configuration
To receive incoming PSTN calls, you’ll need at least one DID. On the Skyetel site, you acquire DIDs under the Phone Numbers tab. You have the option of Porting in Existing Numbers (free for the first 60 days after you sign up for service) or purchasing new ones under the Buy Phone Numbers menu option.
Once you have acquired one or more DIDs, navigate to the Local Numbers or Toll Free Numbers tab and specify the desired SIP Format and Endpoint Group for each DID. Add SMS/MMS and E911 support, if desired. Call Forwarding and Failover are also supported. That completes the VoIP setup on the Skyetel side. System Status is always available here.
Incredible PBX Inbound Routing with Skyetel
Next we need to tell your PBX how to route incoming calls from Skyetel. Using a browser, log into the IP address of your PBX using your admin credentials. Because there is no trunk registration with Skyetel trunks, you will need to create an Inbound Route for every Skyetel DID. You cannot rely upon a Default inbound route because Issabel treats the calls as blocked anonymous calls without an Inbound Route pointing to the 11-digit number of each Skyetel DID. From the Issabel GUI, choose PBX -> PBX Configuration -> Inbound Routes -> Add Incoming Route. For both the Description and DID fields, enter the 11-digit phone number beginning with a 1. Set the Destination for the incoming DID as desired, e.g. IVR:IVR Demo. Click Submit. Reload the Dialplan when prompted. Place a test call to each of your DIDs from an external phone or cellphone after configuring the Inbound Routes.
Incredible PBX Outbound Routing to Skyetel
If Skyetel will be your primary provider, you can use both 10-digit and 11-digit dialing to process outbound calls through your Skyetel account. From the GUI, choose PBX -> PBX Configuration -> Outbound Routes -> Default. Scroll down to the Trunk Sequence section of the template. Choose these 3 trunks in this order: Skyetel-1, Skyetel-NW, and Skyetel-SE. Next, click Submit Changes and reload the dialplan when prompted.
Setting Up a Softphone with Issabel 4
If you’re a Mac user, you’re lucky (and smart). Download and install Telephone from the Mac App Store. Start up the application and choose Telephone:Preference:Accounts. Click on the + icon to add a new account. To set up your softphone, you need 3 pieces of information: the IP address of your server (Domain), and your Username and Password. You can decipher your server’s IP address by running pbxstatus. If you wish to use one of the preconfigured extensions (501 and 502), you’ll find the randomized passwords in /root/passwords.FAQ. Now copy or cut-and-paste your Username and Password into the Accounts dialog of the Telephone app. Click Done when you’re finished, and your new softphone will come to life and should show Available. Dial the IVR (D-E-M-O) to try things out. With Telephone, you can use over two dozen soft phones simultaneously.
For everyone else, we recommend the YateClient softphone which is free. Download it from here. Run YateClient once you’ve installed it and enter the credentials for the Issabel extension. You’ll need the IP address of your server plus your extension number and password associated with either the 501 or 502 extension.
Adding Speech Recognition Support to Incredible PBX
To support many of our applications, Incredible PBX has included Google’s speech recognition service. These applications include AsteriDex Voice Dialing by Name (411) and Wolfram Alpha for Asterisk (4747), all of which use Lefteris Zafiris’ terrific speech-recog AGI script. Unfortunately (for some), Google now has tightened up the terms of use for their free speech recognition service. Now you can only use it for "personal and development use." If you meet those criteria, keep reading. Here’s how to activate speech recognition on Incredible PBX. Don’t skip any steps!
If you like Siri, you’ll love Wolfram Alpha. To use Wolfram Alpha by phone, you first must obtain a free Wolfram Alpha APP-ID. Then issue the following command replacing APP-ID with your actual ID. Don’t change the yourID portion of the command:
sed -i "s|yourID|APP-ID|" /var/lib/asterisk/agi-bin/4747
Now you’re ready to try out the speech recognition apps. Dial 411 and say "American Airlines" to be connected to American.
To access Wolfram Alpha by phone, dial 4747 and enter your query, e.g. "What planes are overhead now?" Read the Nerd Vittles tutorial for additional examples and tips.
Implementing IBM TTS and Voice Recognition
While Google voice recognition originally was free, it has been a hit and miss platform for the last couple years. If you’re really serious about text-to-speech (TTS) and voice recognition (STT) quality, then you owe it to yourself to make the switch to the IBM platform. For most deployments, the IBM platform will be nearly free. Our recent tutorial will walk you through the process of getting your IBM credentials and setting up the TTS and STT functions with IBM Watson. Be advised that you will have two sets of credentials, one for TTS applications and another for STT applications. Once you have your credentials, here are the steps to reconfigure Issabel to use the IBM TTS and voice recognition services. Begin by logging into your server as root and switching to the /var/lib/asterisk/agi-bin directory. Then install the IBM components:
cd /var/lib/asterisk/agi-bin wget http://incrediblepbx.com/ibm-issabel.tar.gz tar zxvf ibm-issabel.tar.gz rm -f ibm-issabel.tar.gz mv custom/* /var/lib/asterisk/sounds/custom
Implementing IBM STT with Incredible PBX’s Voice Dialer. With this application, a user dials 411 and speaks the name of a person or company to call. The app searches for a match in the AsteriDex directory and places the call. To get started, edit getnumber.sh and insert your IBM STT credentials in the API_USERNAME and API_PASSWORD fields. Then save the file. Replace the Call by Name context by running the following script: ./install-ibm411.sh. Place a test call by dialing 411 and saying "American Airlines."
Implementing IBM STT with Incredible PBX’s SMS Dictator. With this application, a user dials 767, enters the 10-digit number for the recipient of an SMS text message, and then speaks the message to be sent. To get started, edit smsgen.sh and insert your IBM STT and Google Voice credentials using your plain-text Google password. Then save the file. Replace the SMS Dictator context by running the following script: ./install-sms767-dialplan.sh. Place a test call to 767, and the app will send your text message to the recipient’s phone number using the gvoice application. If you experience failed calls, try executing the Unlock Captcha procedure using your Google Voice credentials. Then try again.
Implementing IBM STT with Incredible PBX’s Wolfram Alpha. With this Siri-like app, a user dials 4747 and speaks a query to be sent to Wolfram Alpha for processing. The results then are played back to the caller. To begin, edit wolfram.sh and insert your IBM STT credentials as well as your Wolfram Alpha APPID. Then save the file. Replace the Wolfram Alpha dialplan code by running the following script: ./install-wolfram4747-dialplan.sh. Place a test call by dialing 4747. When prompted for your query, say "What planes are flying overhead now?"
Implementing IBM TTS with Incredible PBX’s News and Weather Apps. With these apps, a user dials 951 for the latest News Headlines from Yahoo or 947 to retrieve the latest weather report by ZIP code. To begin, edit ibmtts.php and insert your IBM TTS credentials in the IBM_username and IBM_password fields. Then save the file. Replace the news and weather by zip code contexts by running the following script: ./install-ibmtts-dialplan.sh.
Generating IBM Voice Prompts to Use with Issabel. We’ve included a script that will let you generate IBM voice prompts that are suitable for use with Issabel and Incredible PBX. To begin, edit ibmprompt.php and insert your IBM TTS credentials in the IBM_username and IBM_password fields. Then save the file. Next, we need to add MP3 support to the SOX application before we can create voice prompts reliably with IBM’s Bluemix TTS service. Here’s how:
yum -y remove sox yum -y install libmad libmad-devel libid3tag libid3tag-devel lame lame-devel flac-devel cd /usr/src wget https://sourceforge.net/projects/sox/files/sox/14.4.2/sox-14.4.2.tar.gz tar zxvf sox-14.4.2.tar.gz rm -f sox-14.4.2.tar.gz cd sox* ./configure make -s make install ldconfig ln -s /usr/local/bin/sox /usr/bin/sox
Generate voice prompts using the following syntax: ./ibmprompt.php "Hello world."
Configuring the Issabel Fax Server
Incredible PBX for Issabel includes turnkey fax support with Issabel. Once you have added a trunk that supports VoIP faxing (HINT: Skyetel trunks work great!), fax configuration with Issabel only takes a minute. Start by logging into the Issabel web interface as admin. First, navigate to PBX:PBX Configuration:Extensions:Fax and obtain your password for extension 329. Next, navigate to Fax:Virtual Fax:New Virtual Fax. Fill in the form as shown below using your actual email address and phone number for receiving faxes as well as your actual extension 329 secret. Then click SAVE. Assuming you typed your secret correctly, you will see a status notification showing virtual fax machine "Running and idle on ttyIAX1."
Assuming you already have set up a Skyetel trunk as outlined above, the next step is to modify the Inbound Route for this trunk to support fax detection. In that way, incoming fax calls will automatically be redirected to extension 329 and the received faxes will be emailed to you in PDF format. Set the email address in Fax:Fax Master. In addition, the faxes can be downloaded and managed from Fax:Virtual Fax:Fax Viewer. Modify your Inbound Route to match the #3 settings shown below. Then save/reload your changes.
To receive the incoming faxes by email, navigate to Fax:Fax Master and enter your email address. Then click SAVE.
The final step is to designate the IP addresses of those authorized to send faxes using Issabel. Navigate to Fax:Fax Clients and specify the public and private IP addresses (one per line) authorized to send faxes. Then click SAVE. Hylafax clients can be used remotely, or you can use the web utility included with Issabel: Fax:Virtual Fax:Send Fax.
The best way to test things out is to send yourself a test fax. FaxZERO lets you send 5 free faxes of up to 3 pages every day. Give it a whirl.
To send a fax out from your server from the Linux CLI using either a text document or PDF file, the syntax looks like the following:
sendfax -n -d 8005551212 smsmsg.txt
Replacing MeetMe Conferencing with ConfBridge
The only serious limitation we’ve found with the Issabel implementation of FreePBX is the continued reliance upon MeetMe for conferencing which requires a timing source unlike the newer ConfBridge module. Particularly on OpenVZ VPS platforms, this causes issues because of the inability to directly access the kernel. Fortunately, Issabel has included the functioning ConfBridge module in their implementation so the workaround is fairly simple. By default, we’ve included a 2663 (C-O-N-F) conference setup in the Issabel GUI configuration so simply remove it. Then add a 2663 Misc Destination with a description of CONF. Finally, while still in the GUI, edit the IVR Demo and change the destination for option 2 to Misc Destination:CONF and save the file. Next, log into the Linux CLI as root and change to the /etc/asterisk directory. Edit confbridge_custom.conf and insert the following code. Then save the file.
[general] ;This section reserved for future use [default_user] type = user quiet = no announce_user_count = yes announce_user_count_all = yes wait_marked = no end_marked = no dsp_drop_silence = yes announce_join_leave = yes admin = no marked = no startmuted = no music_on_hold_when_empty = yes [admin] type = user quiet = no announce_user_count = yes announce_user_count_all = yes wait_marked = no end_marked = no dsp_drop_silence = yes announce_join_leave = yes admin = yes marked = no startmuted = no music_on_hold_when_empty = yes [default_bridge] type = bridge record_conference = no sound_only_person = conf-onlyperson sound_has_joined = conf-hasjoin sound_has_left = conf-hasleft sound_kicked = conf-kicked sound_muted = conf-muted sound_unmuted = conf-unmuted sound_there_are = conf-thereare sound_other_in_party = conf-otherinparty sound_place_into_conference = conf-placeintoconf sound_wait_for_leader = conf-waitforleader sound_get_pin = conf-getpin sound_invalid_pin = conf-invalidpin sound_locked = conf-locked sound_unlocked_now = conf-unlockednow sound_lockednow = conf-lockednow sound_error_menu = conf-errormenu [admin_menu] type = menu * = playback_and_continue(conf-adminmenu) *1 = toggle_mute *2 = admin_toggle_conference_lock *3 = admin_kick_last *4 = decrease_listening_volume *5 = reset_listening_volume *6 = increase_listening_volume *7 = decrease_talking_volume *8 = reset_talking_volume *9 = increase_talking_volume *# = leave_conference *0 = admin_toggle_mute_participants [user_menu] type = menu * = playback_and_continue(conf-usermenu) *1 = toggle_mute *4 = decrease_listening_volume *5 = reset_listening_volume *6 = increase_listening_volume *7 = decrease_talking_volume *8 = no_op *9 = increase_talking_volume *# = leave_conference
Now edit extensions_custom.conf and insert the following code below the [from-internal-custom] label replacing the 1234 and 4321 PINs in lines 6 and 7 with user and admin PINs of your choice (up to 8 numbers each). Then restart Asterisk: amportal restart
.
;# // BEGIN Conf1 exten => 2663,1,Answer exten => 2663,2,Wait(1) exten => 2663,3,Playback(conf-getpin) exten => 2663,4,Read(MYPIN,beep,8) exten => 2663,5,GotoIf($["${MYPIN}" = "1234"]?userpin) exten => 2663,6,GotoIf($["${MYPIN}" = "4321"]?adminpin) exten => 2663,7,Playback(goodbye) exten => 2663,8,Hangup exten => 2663,n(adminpin),Set(CONFBRIDGE(user,template)=admin) exten => 2663,n,ConfBridge(1) exten => 2663,n,Hangup exten => 2663,n(userpin),Set(CONFBRIDGE(user,template)=default_user) exten => 2663,n,ConfBridge(1) exten => 2663,n,Hangup ;# // END Conf1
Backup and Restore with Issabel
Issabel ships with the most full-featured Backup and Restore options of any of the Asterisk distributions. Ask us how we know. Yes, we managed to wipe out the entire Dashboard menu system on one of our early builds. Restoring from an image took only a couple minutes. To get started, navigate to System -> Backup/Restore. You can create backups locally and then drag and drop them onto a remote FTP server if desired. There is enormous flexibility in choosing what to backup or restore. And there’s even an option to automatically generate periodic backups. You’ll find your backups in /var/www/backup should you ever need to copy them to a new server. Now would be a good time to create your first backup. 🙂
Sampling Other Incredible PBX Applications
As installed, Incredible PBX includes dozens of additional applications for Asterisk. Here’s how to sample some of them using a softphone connected to your Issabel PBX. A good place to start is Allison’s Demo IVR (dial D-E-M-O) using any phone connected to your PBX:
Nerd Vittles Demo IVR Options
1 – 411 -Call by Name (say "American Airlines")
2 – 2663 – MeetMe/ConfBridge Conference
3 – 4747 – Wolfram Alpha
4 – 53669 – Lenny (The Telemarketer’s Worst Nightmare)
5 – 951 – Today’s News Headlines
6 – 947 – Weather Forecast (enter a 5-digit ZIP code)
7 – 86329 – Today in History
8 – 501 – Speak to a Real Person
For ODBC demos, dial 222 and enter 12345 for the employee number for a sample database application. Or dial 223 for a sample ODBC dialer using AsteriDex. Enter 263 (first three letters of American Airlines) to place the call. Sample dialplan code is stored in /etc/asterisk/odbc.conf. Dial L-E-N-N-Y (53669) to call or forward telemarketer calls to Lenny. Dial T-I-M-E (8463) for Time of Day. Dial *88HHMM to set an Alarm for HH:MM where HH is the hour of the day in military time. Dial C-O-N-F (2663) for MeetMe conference. Conference credentials are in /root/passwords.FAQ. Voice Dialer (411) works with any database entry in AsteriDex. Access AsteriDex with a browser at https://Issabel-IP-Address/asteridex4. Telephone Reminders can be scheduled by phone (123) or via the web: https://Issabel-IP-Address/reminders. Sample code for the FLITE, GoogleTTS, and PicoTTS engines is in 951 (Yahoo News) context of /etc/asterisk/extensions_custom.conf. All of your FreePBX "old favorites" including blacklists, call transfers and forwarding, dictation, recordings and more are still available as well: PBX:PBX Config:Feature Codes.
Continue Reading: Configuring Extensions, Trunks & Routes.
Don’t Miss: Incredible PBX Application User’s Guide covering the 31 Incredible PBX apps.
Published: Friday, October 5, 2018 Updated: Friday, February 1, 2019
Support Issues. With any application as sophisticated as this one, you’re bound to have questions. Blog comments are a difficult place to address support issues although we welcome general comments about our articles and software. If you have particular support issues, we encourage you to get actively involved in the PBX in a Flash Forum. It’s the best Asterisk tech support site in the business, and it’s all free! Please have a look and post your support questions there. Unlike some forums, the PIAF Forum is extremely friendly and is supported by literally hundreds of Asterisk gurus and thousands of users just like you. You won’t have to wait long for an answer to your question.
Need help with Asterisk? Visit the VoIP-info Forum.
Special Thanks to Our Generous Sponsors
FULL DISCLOSURE: ClearlyIP, Skyetel, Vitelity, DigitalOcean, Vultr, VoIP.ms, 3CX, Sangoma, TelecomsXchange and VitalPBX have provided financial support to Nerd Vittles and our open source projects through advertising, referral revenue, and/or merchandise. As an Amazon Associate and Best Buy Affiliate, we also earn from qualifying purchases. We’ve chosen these providers not the other way around. Our decisions are based upon their corporate reputation and the quality of their offerings and pricing. Our recommendations regarding technology are reached without regard to financial compensation except in situations in which comparable products at comparable pricing are available from multiple sources. In this limited case, we support our sponsors because our sponsors support us.
BOGO Bonaza: Enjoy state-of-the-art VoIP service with a $10 credit and half-price SIP service on up to $500 of Skyetel trunking with free number porting when you fund your Skyetel account. No limits on number of simultaneous calls. Quadruple data center redundancy. $25 monthly minimum spend required. Tutorial and sign up details are here.
The lynchpin of Incredible PBX 2020 and beyond is ClearlyIP components which bring management of FreePBX modules and SIP phone integration to a level never before available with any other Asterisk distribution. And now you can configure and reconfigure your new Incredible PBX phones from the convenience of the Incredible PBX GUI.
VitalPBX is perhaps the fastest-growing PBX offering based upon Asterisk with an installed presence in more than 100 countries worldwide. VitalPBX has generously provided a customized White Label version of Incredible PBX tailored for use with all Incredible PBX and VitalPBX custom applications. Follow this link for a free test drive!
Special Thanks to Vitelity. Vitelity is now Voyant Communications and has halted new registrations for the time being. Our special thanks to Vitelity for their unwavering financial support over many years and to the many Nerd Vittles readers who continue to enjoy the benefits of their service offerings. We will keep everyone posted on further developments.
- In the unlikely event that Skyetel cannot provide a 10% reduction in your current origination rate and/or DID costs, Skyetel will give you an additional $50 credit to use with the Skyetel service. [↩]
SIP Happens! Deploying a Publicly-Accessible Asterisk PBX – replaced
We’ve previously documented the benefits of SIP URI calling. Because the calls are free from and to anywhere in the world, the use case is compelling. The drawbacks, particularly with Asterisk® servers, have primarily centered around the security implications of exposing SIP on a publicly-accessible server. Today we want to take a fresh look at a possible SIP implementation for Asterisk based upon the pioneering work of Dr. Lin Song back in the PBX in a Flash heyday. We’ve embellished Lin’s original IPtables creation with additional security mechanisms now available with Fail2Ban, Asterisk, FreePBX®, and Travelin’ Man 3 as well as a terrific tutorial from JavaPipe. All of Lin’s work and ours is open source GPL3 code which you are more than welcome to use or improve pursuant to the terms of the GPL3 license.
Consider this. If everyone in the world had an accessible SIP address instead of a phone number, every call to every person in the world via the Internet would be free. That pretty much sums up why SIP URIs are important. The syntax for SIP URIs depends upon your platform. With Asterisk they look like this: SIP/somebody@FQDN.yourdomain.com. On SIP phones, SIP URIs look like this: sip:somenameORnumber@FQDN.yourdomain.com. Others use somenameORnumber@FQDN.yourdomain.com. Assuming you have a reliable Internet connection, once you have “dialed” a SIP URI, the destination SIP device will ring just as if the called party had a POTS phone. Asterisk® processes SIP URIs in much the same way as calls originating from commercial trunk providers, but anonymous SIP calls are blocked.
Before we get too deep in the weeds, let us take a moment to stress that we don’t recommend this SIP design for mission-critical PBXs because there still are some security risks with denial of service attacks and other vulnerabilities. For these deployments, Incredible PBX® coupled with the Travelin’ Man 3 firewall which blocks SIP access except from whitelisted IP addresses and FQDNs has no equal. When properly deployed, the bad guys cannot even see your server much less attack it. A typical use case for today’s new SIP design would be a public Asterisk server that provides anonymous SIP access to the general public without any exposure to corporate jewels. For example, we’ve put up a demonstration server that provides news and weather reports. In the corporate world, an equivalent deployment might provide access to a product database with pricing and availability details. Our rule of thumb before deploying today’s platform would be to ask yourself what damage could be inflicted if your server were totally compromised. If the answer is zero, then proceed. Otherwise, stick with Incredible PBX and the Travelin’ Man 3 firewall. The ideal platform for deployment using the same rule of thumb as above is one of these $7 to $15/year OpenVZ cloud platforms.
Overview. There are a number of moving parts in today’s implementation. So let’s briefly go through the steps. Begin with a cloud-based installation of Incredible PBX. Next, we’ll upgrade the Fail2Ban setup to better secure a publicly-accessible Asterisk server. We’ll also customize the port for SSH access to reduce the attack rate on the SSH port. You’ll need a fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) for your server because we’ll be blocking all access to your server by IP address. If you want to allow SIP URI calls to your server, you’ll need this FQDN. If you want to also allow SIP registrations from this same FQDN, then a single FQDN will suffice; however, with OpenVZ platforms, we recommend using a different (and preferably more obscure) FQDN for SIP registrations since registered users have an actual extension on your PBX that is capable of making outbound calls which usually cost money. In this case, the obscure FQDN performs double-duty as the equivalent of a password to your PBX. For example, an FQDN such as hk76dl34z.yourdomain.com would rarely be guessed by an anonymous person while sip.yourdomain.com would be fairly obvious to attempted intruders. But that’s your call.
Using whatever FQDN you’ve chosen for SIP registrations, we’ll add an entry to /etc/asterisk/sip_custom.conf that looks like this: domain=hk76dl34z.yourdomain.com
. That will block all SIP registration attempts except from that domain. It will not block SIP invitations! The next step will be to add a new [from-sip-external] context to extensions_override_freepbx.conf. Inside that context, we’ll specify the FQDN used for public SIP URI connections to your server, e.g. sip.yourdomain.com
. This will block SIP invitations except SIP URIs containing that domain name. We’ll also define all of the extensions on your Asterisk server which can be reached with SIP URI invitations. These could be actual extensions, or ring groups, or IVRs, or Asterisk applications. The choice is yours. These SIP URI authorizations can be either numeric (701@sip.yourdomain.com) or alpha (weather@sip.yourdomain.com) or alphanumeric (channel7@sip.abc.com). Finally, we’ll put the new IPtables firewall rules in place and adjust your existing iptables-custom setup to support the new publicly-accessible PBX. For example, we’ll still use whitelist entries for web access to your server since anonymous users would cause nothing but mischief if TCP ports 80 and 443 were exposed. It’s worth noting that KVM platforms provide a more robust implementation of IPtables that can block more types of nefarious traffic. We’ve supplemented the original article with a KVM update below. With OpenVZ platforms, we have to rely upon Asterisk to achieve IP address blocking and some types of packet filtering. So why not choose a KVM platform? It’s simple. These platforms typically cost twice as much as equivalent OpenVZ offerings. With this type of deployment, KVM is worth it.
Installing Incredible PBX Base Platform
Today’s design requires an Incredible PBX platform on a cloud-based server. Start by following this tutorial to put the pieces in place. We recommend you also install the Whole Enchilada addition once the base install is finished. Make sure everything is functioning reliably before continuing.
Upgrading the Fail2Ban Platform
Because this will be a publicly-accessible server, we’re going to tighten up the Asterisk configuration in Fail2Ban and lengthen the bantime and findtime associated with Fail2Ban’s Asterisk log monitoring. We also recommend that you whitelist the IP addresses associated with your server and PCs from which you plan to access your server so that you don’t inadvertently block yourself.
Log into your server as root and issue the following commands. When the jail.conf file opens in the nano editor, scroll down to line 34 and add the IP addresses you’d like to whitelist to the existing ignoreip settings separating each IP address with a space. Then press Ctrl-X, Y, then Enter to save your changes. Verify that Fail2Ban restarts successfully.
cd /etc/fail2ban wget http://incrediblepbx.com/fail2ban-public.tar.gz tar zxvf fail2ban-public.tar.gz rm -f fail2ban-public.tar.gz nano -w jail.conf service fail2ban restart
If you ever get locked out of your own server, you can use the Serial Console in your VPS Control Panel to log into your server. Then verify that your IP address has been blocked by issuing the command: iptables -nL
. If your IP is shown as blocked, issue this command with your address to unblock it: fail2ban-client set asterisk unbanip 12.34.56.78
Obtaining an FQDN for Your Server
Because we’ll be blocking IP address SIP access to your server, you’ll need to obtain one or perhaps two FQDNs for your server. If you manage DNS for a domain that you own, this is easy. If not, you can obtain a free FQDN from ChangeIP here. Thanks, @mbellot.
For the FQDN that you’ll be using for SIP registrations on your server, configure Asterisk to use it by logging into your server as root and issuing the following command using your new FQDN, e.g. xyz.yourdomain.com. Thanks, @ou812.
echo "domain=xyz.yourdomain.com" >> /etc/asterisk/sip_custom.conf
SECURITY ALERT: Never use the SIP URI MOD on a server such as this one with a publicly-exposed SIP port as it is possible for some nefarious individual to spoof your FQDN in the headers of a SIP packet and easily gain outbound calling access using your server’s trunk credentials.
Customizing the [sip-external-custom] Context
All FreePBX-based servers include a sip-external-custom context as part of the default installation; however, we need a customized version to use for a publicly-accessible PBX. You can’t simply update the context in /etc/asterisk/extensions.conf because FreePBX will overwrite the changes the next time you reload your dialplan. Instead we have to copy the context into extensions_override_freepbx.conf and make the changes there. So let’s start by copying the new template there with the following commands:
cd /tmp wget http://incrediblepbx.com/from-sip-external.txt cd /etc/asterisk cat /tmp/from-sip-external.txt >> extensions_override_freepbx.conf rm -f /tmp/from-sip-external.txt nano -w extensions_override_freepbx.conf
When the nano editor opens the override file, navigate to line #10 of the [from-sip-external] context and replace xyz.domain.com with the FQDN you want to use for SIP invites to your server. These are the connections that are used to actually connect to an extension on your server (NOT to register). As noted previously, this can be a different FQDN than the one used to actually register to an extension on your server. Next, scroll down below line #24, and you will see a series of lines that actually authorize anonymous SIP connections with your server. There are two numeric entries and also two alpha entries to access the News and Weather apps on your server. The 13th position in the dialplan is required for all authorized calls.
exten => 947,13,Dial(local/947@from-internal) exten => 951,13,Dial(local/951@from-internal) exten => news,13,Dial(local/951@from-internal) exten => weather,13,Dial(local/947@from-internal)
You can leave these in place, remove them, or add new entries depending upon which extensions you want to make publicly accessible on your server. Here are some syntax examples for other types of server access that may be of interest.
; Call VoIP Users Conference exten => 882,13,Dial(SIP/vuc@vuc.me) exten => vuc,13,Dial(SIP/vuc@vuc.me) ; Call Default CONF app exten => 2663,13,Dial(local/${EXTEN}@from-internal) exten => conf,13,Dial(local/2663@from-internal) ; Call Bob at Local Extension 701 exten => 701,13,Dial(local/${EXTEN}@from-internal) exten => bob,13,Dial(local/701@from-internal) ; Call Default Inbound Route thru Time Condition exten => home,13,Goto(timeconditions,1,1) ; Call Inbound Trunk 8005551212 exten => 8005551212,13,Goto(from-trunk,${DID},1) ; Call Lenny exten => 53669,13,Dial(local/${EXTEN}@from-internal) exten => lenny,13,Dial(SIP/2233435945@sip2sip.info) ; Call any toll-free number (AT&T Directory Assistance in example) exten => information,13,Dial(SIP/18005551212@switch.starcompartners.com)
Once you’ve added your FQDN and authorized SIP URI extensions, save the file: Ctrl-X, Y, then Enter.
One final piece is required to enabled anonymous SIP URI connections to your server:
echo "allowguest=yes" >> /etc/asterisk/sip_general_custom.conf
Now restart Asterisk: amportal restart
UPDATE for DialPlan Junkies: We received a few inquiries following publication inquiring about the dialplan design. We’ve taken advantage of a terrific feature of Asterisk which lets calls fall through to the next line of a dialplan if there is no match on a Goto(${EXTEN},13) command. For example, if a caller dials ward@sip.domain.com and there is a line 12 in the dialplan directing the call to ward,13 which exists, call processing will continue there. However, if the extension does not exist, the call will not be terminated. Instead, if there exists a more generic line 13 in the dialplan, e.g. exten => _X.,13,Goto(s,1), call processing will continue there. We use this trick to then redirect the call to an ‘s’ extension sequence to announce that the called extension could not be reached. It’s the reason all of the whitelisted extensions have to have the same line 13 designation so that call processing can continue with the generic line 13 when a specific extension match fails.
Configuring IPtables for Public SIP Access
You may recall that, with Incredible PBX, we bring up the basic IPtables firewall using the /etc/sysconfig/iptables rules. Then we add a number of whitelist entries using /usr/local/sbin/iptables-custom. We’re going to do much the same thing with today’s setup except the rule sets are a bit different. Let’s start by putting the default iptables-custom file in place:
cd /usr/local/sbin wget http://incrediblepbx.com/iptables-custom-public.tar.gz tar zxvf iptables-custom-public.tar.gz rm -f iptables-custom-public.tar.gz nano -w iptables-custom
When the nano editor opens, scroll to the bottom of the file. You’ll note that we’ve started a little list of notorious bad guys to get you started. Fail2Ban will actually do a pretty good job of managing these, but for the serious recidivists, blocking them permanently is probably a good idea. In addition to the bad guys, you’ll want to whitelist your own IP addresses and domains so that you don’t get blocked from FreePBX web access to your server. The syntax looks like the following two examples:
/usr/sbin/iptables -I INPUT -s pbxinaflash.dynamo.org -j ACCEPT /usr/sbin/iptables -I INPUT -s 8.8.8.8 -j ACCEPT
Whenever you make changes to your IPtables configuration, remember to restart IPtables using the following command ONLY: iptables-restart
Now let’s put the final IPtables piece in place with the default IPtables config file:
cd /etc/sysconfig wget http://incrediblepbx.com/iptables-public.tar.gz tar zxvf iptables-public.tar.gz rm -f iptables-public.tar.gz nano -w iptables
When the nano editor opens the file, scroll down to line 51 which controls the TCP port for SSH access to your server. We strongly recommend you change this from 22 to something in the 1000-2000 range. HINT: Your birth year is easy to remember. In the next step, we’ll make the change in your SSH configuration as well.
Next, scroll down to lines 143 and 144. Replace YOUR_HOSTNAME.no-ip.com on both lines with the FQDN of your server that will be used to accept SIP invitations (connections) on your server. These entries have no effect on SIP registrations which we covered above!
Once you’ve made these changes, save the file BUT DO NOT RESTART IPTABLES JUST YET.
Securing the SSH Access Port
TCP port 22 is probably one of the most abused ports on the Internet because it controls access to SSH and the crown jewels by default. Assuming you changed this port in the IPtables firewall setup above, we now need to change it in your SSH config file as well. Edit /etc/ssh/sshd_config and scroll down to line 12. Change the entry to: Port 1999 assuming 1999 is the port you’ve chosen. Be sure to remove the comment symbol (#) at the beginning of the line if it exists. Then save the file. Now reboot your server, and you should be all set.
Dealing with the Bad Guys
You’ll be amazed how quickly and how many new friends you’ll make on the public Internet within the first few hours. You can watch the excitement from the Asterisk CLI by logging into your server as root and issuing the command: asterisk -rvvvvvvvvvv
. Another helpful tool is to monitor your IPtables status which will show IP addresses that have been temporarily blocked by Fail2Ban: iptables -nL
. This will catch most of the bad guys and block them. But some are smarter than others, and many know how to spoof IP addresses in SIP packets as you will quickly see. Unlike on KVM platforms, IPtables on most OpenVZ platforms cannot search packets for text strings which is a simple way to block many of these attackers. HINT: You get what you pay for. And, in some cases, attackers disguise their address or use yours. We’ve now found that ${SIPURI} holds the caller’s true identity so we’ve updated the code accordingly. Whether to permanently block these guys is completely up to you. A typical SIP INVITE before such a call is dropped only consumes about 100 bytes so it’s usually not a big deal. You also can manually block callers using the Fail2Ban client with the desired IP address: fail2ban-client set asterisk banip 12.34.56.78
.
Additional Security on KVM Platforms
As we mentioned above, a KVM platform provides considerably more security for your public-facing server because you can block entire countries using the ipset extension to IPtables. You can read all about it here. After considerable discussion and suggestions on the PIAF Forum, we would offer the following code which blocks the countries we have identified as causing the majority of problems. First, modify your /etc/sysconfig/iptables configuration and insert the following code in the IPSPF section of the script around line 93. You can change the list of blocked countries to meet your own needs. Just be sure to make the same country-code changes in the blockem.sh script which we will cover in step 2. A list of available country codes can be found here. Save your changes, but do NOT restart IPtables just yet.
-A IPSPF -m set --match-set cn src -j DROP -A IPSPF -m set --match-set ru src -j DROP -A IPSPF -m set --match-set ps src -j DROP -A IPSPF -m set --match-set kp src -j DROP -A IPSPF -m set --match-set ua src -j DROP -A IPSPF -m set --match-set md src -j DROP -A IPSPF -m set --match-set nl src -j DROP -A IPSPF -m set --match-set fr src -j DROP
Second, we want to add a new /etc/blockem.sh script and make it executable (chmod +x /etc/blockem.sh
). Make sure the country list in line #5 matches the dropped countries list you added to IPtables in step #1 above.
#!/bin/bash cd /etc wget -qO - http://www.ipdeny.com/ipblocks/data/countries/all-zones.tar.gz| tar zxvf - for i in \\ cn ru ps kp ua md nl fr do /usr/sbin/ipset create -exist $i hash:net for j in $(cat $i.zone); do /usr/sbin/ipset add -exist $i $j; done done wait sleep 5 service iptables restart wait service fail2ban restart exit 0
Third, try things out by running the script: /etc/blockem.sh
. Verify that IPtables is, in fact, blocking the listed countries: iptables -nL
.
BUG: Some early releases had a missing line which caused the IPSPF section of code in the IPtables script not to be executed. You can test whether you’re missing the necessary line by issuing the following command:
grep "INPUT -j IPSPF" /etc/sysconfig/iptables
If the result is a blank line, then issue the following command to fix the problem:
sed -i 's|-A INPUT -j ASIP|-A INPUT -j IPSPF\\n-A INPUT -j ASIP|' /etc/sysconfig/iptables
Finally, we recommend adding the script to /etc/rc.d/rc.local so that it gets run whenever you reboot your server.
In choosing a KVM platform, we’ve had good luck with the $5/month Digital Ocean platform where you still can get a $100 credit to kick the tires for 60 days, Vultr (similar pricing to D.O. without the 60-day credit). With either of these providers, you can add automatic backups for an extra dollar a month. In the bargain basement (may not be here tomorrow) category, we like (and use) both the SnowVPS KVM $15/year and AlphaRacks KVM $22/year offerings. Many other low-cost options are documented on the LowEndBox site. Just don’t invest more than you can afford to lose… and make a backup.1
Connecting a SIP Phone to Kamailio or LinPhone
If you followed along in our initial Kamailio adventure, then it’s easy to test some SIP URI calls to your new server. You can connect virtually any kind of SIP telephone or endpoint to Kamailio. Another easy way to try out SIP calling is to first set up a free LinPhone SIP Account.
You can find dozens of recommendations for hardware-based SIP phones both on Nerd Vittles and the PIAF Forum. For today we’ll get you started with one of our favorite (free) softphones, YateClient. It’s available for almost all desktop platforms. Download YateClient from here. Run YateClient once you’ve installed it and enter the credentials for your Kamailio or LinPhone account you’ve previously created. You’ll need the IP address of your Kamailio server or LinPhone’s FQDN (sip.linphone.org) plus your account’s password. Fill in the Yate Client template using the IP address or FQDN as well as your Username and whatever Password you assigned to the account when you created it. Click OK to save your entries.
Once the Yate softphone shows that it is registered, try a test call to one of the SIP URIs you authorized on your new Asterisk server: sip:947@sip.yourdomain.com.
If you don’t happen to have a Kamailio server or a LinPhone SIP account to play with but you have another Asterisk server, then the simple way to enable SIP URI extensions is by editing /etc/asterisk/extensions_custom.conf. In the [from-internal-custom] context, add an extension that can be used to contact any desired SIP URI. Then reload your dialplan: asterisk -rx "dialplan reload"
. Now dial that extension (2468 in the following example) from any phone connected to your Asterisk server. The entry would look something like this to call the SIP URI on your new server for the latest weather forecast:
exten => 2468,1,Dial(SIP/weather@sip.yourdomain.com)
Originally published: Monday, January 28, 2019 Updated: Wednesday, February 6, 2019
Need help with Asterisk? Visit the VoIP-info Forum.
Special Thanks to Our Generous Sponsors
FULL DISCLOSURE: ClearlyIP, Skyetel, Vitelity, DigitalOcean, Vultr, VoIP.ms, 3CX, Sangoma, TelecomsXchange and VitalPBX have provided financial support to Nerd Vittles and our open source projects through advertising, referral revenue, and/or merchandise. As an Amazon Associate and Best Buy Affiliate, we also earn from qualifying purchases. We’ve chosen these providers not the other way around. Our decisions are based upon their corporate reputation and the quality of their offerings and pricing. Our recommendations regarding technology are reached without regard to financial compensation except in situations in which comparable products at comparable pricing are available from multiple sources. In this limited case, we support our sponsors because our sponsors support us.
BOGO Bonaza: Enjoy state-of-the-art VoIP service with a $10 credit and half-price SIP service on up to $500 of Skyetel trunking with free number porting when you fund your Skyetel account. No limits on number of simultaneous calls. Quadruple data center redundancy. $25 monthly minimum spend required. Tutorial and sign up details are here.
The lynchpin of Incredible PBX 2020 and beyond is ClearlyIP components which bring management of FreePBX modules and SIP phone integration to a level never before available with any other Asterisk distribution. And now you can configure and reconfigure your new Incredible PBX phones from the convenience of the Incredible PBX GUI.
VitalPBX is perhaps the fastest-growing PBX offering based upon Asterisk with an installed presence in more than 100 countries worldwide. VitalPBX has generously provided a customized White Label version of Incredible PBX tailored for use with all Incredible PBX and VitalPBX custom applications. Follow this link for a free test drive!
Special Thanks to Vitelity. Vitelity is now Voyant Communications and has halted new registrations for the time being. Our special thanks to Vitelity for their unwavering financial support over many years and to the many Nerd Vittles readers who continue to enjoy the benefits of their service offerings. We will keep everyone posted on further developments.
- Digital Ocean and Vultr provide modest referral credits to Nerd Vittles for those that use our referral code. It in no way colors our recommendations regarding these two providers, both of whom we use extensively. [↩]
Introducing Skyetel: A VoIP Provider for All Seasons
Having been around the block more times than we can remember, suffice it to say it takes a lot to get us excited about a VoIP provider. Let us tick off some criteria to even get our attention: terrific pricing, failsafe reliability, and first class performance. So just imagine our excitement to discover that an early follower of Nerd Vittles now provides one of the most compelling VoIP services we’ve ever tested with triple redundancy in multiple data centers. And Skyetel now has added what, for some, was the most important piece: support for VoIP servers with dynamic IP addresses. While it’s still beta code, it’s easy to use and reliable. There’s yet another hidden benefit. Incredible PBX coupled with Skyetel makes a perfect platform for redundant servers. We’ll cover it in a future article, but here’s the basic design.
Let’s sweeten the pot a bit more. We were looking for a service provider that could offer a compelling price for the hobbyist and home user while also having the depth to provide millions of minutes to organizations and resellers that actually have such a need. Skyetel now offers Nerd Vittles readers two special offers. First, you can claim a $10 credit for your new account simply by opening a ticket once you sign up. Once you have kicked the tires and are satisfied with the service, you won’t want to miss the Nerd Vittles BOGO offer. Skyetel will match your original deposit up to $250. Deposit $50 and Skyetel will double it. Or plan ahead with a $250 deposit and Skyetel will still double it. That translates into $500 of half-price VoIP service! Once you have funded your account with your money, Skyetel will provide free porting of your DIDs for the first 60 days after you open your account plus a 10% reduction in your current origination rate and DID costs by presenting your last month’s bill.1 Effective 10/1/2023, $25/month minimum spend required. For resellers and high volume users, document your requirements on your Nerd Vittles signup form and let us put you in touch with someone at Skyetel that will make you a deal you can’t refuse. And what does Nerd Vittles get out of this? Glad you asked. We’re delighted to have Skyetel as a platinum sponsor to keep the lights burning and the deals flowing for another decade of articles and open source offerings for our dedicated followers.
Original Skyetel Deposit | Skyetel Deposit Match | Available SIP Service $'s |
---|---|---|
$20 | $20 | $40 |
$50 | $50 | $100 |
$100 | $100 | $200 |
$200 | $200 | $400 |
$250 | $250 | $500 |
We want to also address the elephant in the room. Some have asked about our relationship with Vitelity, a long time sponsor of Nerd Vittles and our open source projects. They’re alive and well. However, the company has gone through several acquisitions in the past few years, and their focus now has shifted more to the reseller and wholesale market. ALL EXISTING VITELITY CUSTOMERS ARE UNAFFECTED BY THIS CHANGE IN DIRECTION. And we are more than happy to put new resellers and wholesalers in touch with someone at Vitelity that can address your requirements. The good news is that you’ll now have two companies to compare while new home users and small businesses have a viable alternative moving forward.
Skyetel’s State-of-the-Art Network Design
Because Skyetel’s system architecture is radically different from most other VoIP providers, we wanted to spend a minute documenting their setup. Typically, a VoIP provider may offer a failover server in case their primary server fails. But all calls flow through the primary server unless there is a system failure. As we noted previously, Skyetel’s current setup includes three redundant data centers, all of which receive incoming calls while being firewalled from each other. Once you place or receive a call from the Skyetel network, their data center is completely removed from the audio path of the call which flows directly between your server and the outside party. Thus, even if the data center experienced a total system failure in the middle of your call, neither you nor the other party would ever know it. This design also eliminates the potential of a man-in-the-middle attack from your VoIP provider’s server.
Skyetel Pricing Overview
This summary is not intended to be an exhaustive listing of all Skyetel services. Follow this link for a complete summary of fees and services. Traditional DIDs are $1 per month. Toll free numbers an additional 20¢ per month. Outbound conversational calls are $0.012 per minute. DIDs can be SMS/MMS enabled for 10¢ per month. E911 service is $1.50 per month. Incoming conversational calls are a penny a minute. CallerID lookups are $0.004 per call. Voicemail transcription is available for 10¢ per message.
Signing Up for Skyetel Service
So here’s the drill to sign up for Skyetel service and take advantage of the Nerd Vittles specials. First, complete the Prequalification Form here. You then will be provided a link to the Skyetel site to complete your registration. Once you have registered on the Skyetel site and your account has been activated, open a support ticket and request your free $10 credit to kick the tires. You cannot port in numbers at no cost until you actually fund your account out of your own pocket. Once you have funded your account, open another ticket for the BOGO credit for your account by referencing the Nerd Vittles special offer. You then can initiate your free number porting requests on the portal and request a credit for the porting fees. BOGO credit is limited to one per person/company/address/location. If you want to take advantage of the 10% discount on your current service, attach a copy of your last month’s bill. See footnote 1 for the fine print. If you have high call volume requirements, document these in your Prequalification Form, and we will be in touch. Easy Peasy!
For those that may be concerned that one day, after your credit expires, you could be paying a penny a minute for phone calls, let me provide a little Ma Bell history lesson for you. When my roommate and I were in law school, our typical phone bill often exceeded $200 a month because we both had girlfriends a couple hundred miles up the road. In today’s dollars, that phone bill translates into roughly $1,200 a month. That would have been 120,000 minutes a month at a penny a minute in today’s dollars. So, yes, VoIP is having a profound influence on the AT&T and Verizon Bell Sisters.
Skyetel Endpoint Group Configuration
Unlike many VoIP providers, Skyetel does not use SIP registrations to make connections to your PBX. Instead, Skyetel utilizes Endpoint Groups to identify which servers can communicate with the Skyetel service. An Endpoint Group consists of a Name, an IP address, a UDP or TCP port for the connection, and a numerical Priority for the group. For incoming calls destined to your PBX, DIDs are associated with an Endpoint Group to route the calls to your PBX. For outgoing calls from your PBX, a matching Endpoint Group is required to authorize outbound calls through the Skyetel network. Thus, the first step in configuring the Skyetel side for use with your PBX is to set up an Endpoint Group. A typical setup for use with Incredible PBX®, Asterisk®, or FreePBX® would look like the following:
- Name: MyPBX
- Priority: 1
- IP Address: PBX-Public-IP-Address
- Port: 5060
- Protocol: UDP
- Description: server1.incrediblepbx.com
Skyetel DID Configuration
To receive incoming PSTN calls, you’ll need at least one DID. On the Skyetel site, you acquire DIDs under the Phone Numbers tab. You have the option of Porting in Existing Numbers (free for the first 60 days after you sign up for service) or purchasing new ones under the Buy Phone Numbers menu option.
Once you have acquired one or more DIDs, navigate to the Local Numbers or Toll Free Numbers tab and specify the desired SIP Format and Endpoint Group for each DID. Add SMS/MMS and E911 support, if desired. Call Forwarding and Failover are also supported. That completes the VoIP setup on the Skyetel side. System Status is always available here.
Incredible PBX Firewall Setup for Skyetel
The Travelin’ Man 3 firewall included with all Incredible PBX platforms limits access to your server based upon whitelisted IP addresses of outside providers and users. In order to receive calls from the multiple Skyetel data centers, the following entries need to be included in the whitelist of your PBX. For new installs of Incredible PBX 13-13 for CentOS, the entries already are included. Otherwise, issue the following commands from the Linux CLI and choose the 0 option using the add-ip utility in /root:
- /root/add-ip Skyetel-NW 52.41.52.34
- /root/add-ip Skyetel-SW 52.8.201.128
- /root/add-ip Skyetel-NE 52.60.138.31
- /root/add-ip Skyetel-SE 50.17.48.216
- /root/add-ip Skyetel-EU 35.156.192.164
NOTE: If your PBX is sitting behind a NAT-based router, then you will also need to forward UDP port 5060 from your router to the internal IP address of your PBX. Otherwise, incoming calls from Skyetel will fail. You also may need to add a NAT=yes entry to each of the Skyetel trunk configurations using the GUI. The telltale sign that the NAT entry is required will be incoming calls with one-way or no audio.
Incredible PBX Trunk Setups for Skyetel
Because Skyetel uses multiple data centers without trunk registrations, you’ll actually need to configure 6 separate Skyetel trunks in the Incredible PBX GUI. The same setup applies for those using generic FreePBX aggregations. We’ve created a script to create all of the trunks for you. Just issue the following commands. The last command assures that you don’t accidentally run the script a second time which would cause all sorts of issues. Feel free to review the code if you want to learn how to create trunks in FreePBX from the command line.
cd /root wget http://incrediblepbx.com/add-skyetel chmod +x add-skyetel # uncomment next line if your incoming calls all have 10-digit numbers # sed -i 's|from-trunk|from-pstn-e164-us|' add-skyetel ./add-skyetel chmod -x add-skyetel
Incredible PBX Inbound Routing for Skyetel
Next we need to tell your PBX how to route incoming calls from Skyetel. Using a browser, log into the IP address of your PBX using your admin credentials. Because there is no trunk registration with Skyetel trunks, you will need to create an Inbound Route for every Skyetel DID. You cannot rely upon a Default inbound route because FreePBX treats the calls as blocked anonymous calls without an Inbound Route pointing to the 11-digit number of each Skyetel DID. From the GUI, choose Connectivity -> Inbound Routes -> Add Inbound Route. For both the Description and DID fields, enter the 11-digit phone number beginning with a 1. Set the Destination for the incoming DID as desired and click Submit. Reload the Dialplan when prompted. Place a test call to each of your DIDs after configuring the Inbound Routes.
Incredible PBX Outbound Routing to Skyetel
If Skyetel will be your primary provider, you can use both 10-digit and 11-digit dialing to process outbound calls through your Skyetel account. From the GUI, choose Connectivity -> Outbound Routes -> Add Outbound Route. For the setup, we recommend the following using the CallerID Number you wish to associate with your outbound calls through Skyetel:
Enter the Dial Patterns under the Dial Patterns tab before saving your outbound route. Here’s what you would enter for 10-digit and 11-digit dialing. If you want to require a dialing prefix to use the Skyetel Outbound Route, enter it in the Prefix field for both dial strings.
Audio Issues with Skyetel
If you experience one-way or no audio on some calls, make sure you have filled in the NAT Settings section in the GUI under Settings -> Asterisk SIP Settings -> General. In addition to adding your external and internal IP addresses there, be sure to add your external IP address in /etc/asterisk/sip_general_custom.conf like the following example and restart Asterisk:
externip=xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
If you’re using PJSIP trunks or extensions on your PBX, implement this fix as well.
Receiving SMS Messages Through Skyetel
Most Skyetel DIDs support SMS messaging. Once you have purchased one or more DIDs, you can edit each number and, under the SMS &MMS tab, you can redirect incoming SMS messages to an email or SMS destination of your choice using the following example:
Sending SMS Messages Through Skyetel
We’ve created a simple script that will let you send SMS messages from the Linux CLI using your Skyetel DIDs. In order to send SMS messages, you first will need to create a SID key and password in the Skyetel portal. From the Settings icon, choose API Keys -> Create. Once the credentials appear, copy both your SID and Password. Then click SAVE.
Next, from the Linux CLI, issue the following commands to download the sms-skyetel script into in your /root folder. Then edit the file and insert your SID, secret, and DID credentials in the fields at the top of the script. Save the file, and you’re all set.
cd /root wget http://incrediblepbx.com/sms-skyetel chmod +x sms-skyetel nano -w sms-skyetel
To send an SMS message, use the following syntax where 18005551212 is the 11-digit SMS destination: sms-skyetel 18005551212 "Some message"
SMS and MMS Messaging with Postcards
Skyetel now has released a terrific, open source Docker app, Postcards, that lets you build an SMS and MMS messaging platform for your entire organization. Suffice it to say, anything you ever wanted to do with SMS and MMS messaging, you can do with Postcards. We won’t repeat Skyetel’s excellent tutorial, but you certainly need to visit their site and take Postcards for a spin.
NEW: Skyetel Support for Dynamic IP Addresses
You asked for it, and Skyetel has delivered. For Nerd Vittles users running servers with dynamic IP addresses, Skyetel now provides support for your platform. Log into your server as root and cd /usr/src
. Then review this tutorial which describes the steps to put the pieces in place. Be advised that this is beta software at this juncture. If you run into issues, please post your questions on the PIAF Forum. Here are the actual steps:
(1) Log in to your Skyetel portal and Add a New Endpoint Group for your server giving it the name and current public IP address of your server.
(2) While still logged in, tap the Gear icon to open Settings dialog and choose API Keys tab.
(3) Add a new API key and write down your new SID and SID password.
(4) If your server is behind a router or firewall, log into that device and map UDP 5060 and UDP 10000-20000 to the private LAN address of your server.
NOTE: If your server is on the Debian, Ubuntu, or Raspbian platform, substitute the following command for the first two yum commands in step #5 below:
apt-get -y install coreutils curl git jq
(5) Log into your server and issue the following commands to install the EndPoint Updater:
yum -y install coreutils curl git epel-release yum -y --enablerepo=epel install jq cd /usr/src git clone https://bitbucket.org/skyetel/ip-endpoint-group-update.git cd ip-endpoint-group-update ./ip-update-endpointgroup.sh
(6) Fill in your credentials when prompted, and the cron script will be installed to keep your server’s dynamic IP address registered with Skyetel.
Introducing Skyetel’s New Fax Platform
Every time we read an article predicting the demise of fax technology, we have to chuckle. We’ve been reading the articles for about 30 years now, and fax still is the goto solution for many organizations. Can you spell HIPPA? Finally, Skyetel has dipped its toes in the fax waters by offering an easy-to-use fax solution for receipt of traditional and T.38 faxes. Simply purchase a Skyetel DID and configure it for vFax routing. Enter an email address for delivery of the faxes, and you’re done.
Sending faxes from the Skyetel portal still is on the drawing boards, but it’s coming. In the meantime, Incredible Fax™ which is bundled with all Incredible PBX® platforms will let you send faxes ’til the cows come home with our easy-to-use Hylafax/AvantFax implementation.
Implementing the New Spam Call Filter
One of the most often requested features for any PBX is spam call filtering. Skyetel takes it to the next level by dealing with the spammers before the calls ever reach your PBX. For each of your Skyetel phone numbers, click on the Features tab and set the Spam Call Filter as desired.
Recording and Transcribing Skyetel Calls
As with spam call filtering, recording and/or transcribing Skyetel calls is only a click away. For each of your Skyetel phone numbers, click on the Features tab and set the option desired for Recording and/or Transcribing calls. Recordings and Transcriptions can be managed from your Skyetel Dashboard. Storage is free for up to 30 days, after which they are deleted.
Skyetel Monitoring of Endpoint Health
In addition to monitoring and reporting the health of all Skyetel services in your web portal, this latest addition allows you to configure Skyetel to not only monitor the State of every registered endpoint but also its Health with realtime metrics of the Latency, Packet Loss, and Jitter of each of your endpoints. Simply check the Network QOS options desired.
Skyetel Expansion for Canadian Users
Here’s some great news for our Canadian friends. Skyetel has been listening!
- Porting to Skyetel in Canada now is significantly easier and faster
- Awesome reductions in audio round trip times
- Epic reductions in time-to-deliver
- Faster response times to technical issues (and fewer of them!)
- Audio for Canadian calls will now originate from Canadian data centers
- SMS and MMS available on Canadian ported numbers
Originally published: Thursday, November 1, 2018 Updated: Wednesday, June 12, 2019
Support Issues. With any application as sophisticated as this one, you’re bound to have questions. Blog comments are a difficult place to address support issues although we welcome general comments about our articles and software. If you have particular support issues, we encourage you to get actively involved in the PBX in a Flash Forum. It’s the best Asterisk tech support site in the business, and it’s all free! Please have a look and post your support questions there. Unlike some forums, the PIAF Forum is extremely friendly and is supported by literally hundreds of Asterisk gurus and thousands of users just like you. You won’t have to wait long for an answer to your question.
Need help with Asterisk? Visit the VoIP-info Forum.
Special Thanks to Our Generous Sponsors
FULL DISCLOSURE: ClearlyIP, Skyetel, Vitelity, DigitalOcean, Vultr, VoIP.ms, 3CX, Sangoma, TelecomsXchange and VitalPBX have provided financial support to Nerd Vittles and our open source projects through advertising, referral revenue, and/or merchandise. As an Amazon Associate and Best Buy Affiliate, we also earn from qualifying purchases. We’ve chosen these providers not the other way around. Our decisions are based upon their corporate reputation and the quality of their offerings and pricing. Our recommendations regarding technology are reached without regard to financial compensation except in situations in which comparable products at comparable pricing are available from multiple sources. In this limited case, we support our sponsors because our sponsors support us.
BOGO Bonaza: Enjoy state-of-the-art VoIP service with a $10 credit and half-price SIP service on up to $500 of Skyetel trunking with free number porting when you fund your Skyetel account. No limits on number of simultaneous calls. Quadruple data center redundancy. $25 monthly minimum spend required. Tutorial and sign up details are here.
The lynchpin of Incredible PBX 2020 and beyond is ClearlyIP components which bring management of FreePBX modules and SIP phone integration to a level never before available with any other Asterisk distribution. And now you can configure and reconfigure your new Incredible PBX phones from the convenience of the Incredible PBX GUI.
VitalPBX is perhaps the fastest-growing PBX offering based upon Asterisk with an installed presence in more than 100 countries worldwide. VitalPBX has generously provided a customized White Label version of Incredible PBX tailored for use with all Incredible PBX and VitalPBX custom applications. Follow this link for a free test drive!
Special Thanks to Vitelity. Vitelity is now Voyant Communications and has halted new registrations for the time being. Our special thanks to Vitelity for their unwavering financial support over many years and to the many Nerd Vittles readers who continue to enjoy the benefits of their service offerings. We will keep everyone posted on further developments.
- In the unlikely event that Skyetel cannot provide a 10% reduction in your current origination rate and/or DID costs, Skyetel will give you an additional $50 credit to use with the Skyetel service. [↩]
Celebrating 2019: Return of the One-Minute Desktop PBX
If you’re new to the VoIP world and aren’t quite ready to dive into the Nerd Vittles cloud computing offerings, then we have a one minute setup solution today that doesn’t require you to buy anything ever. You can use almost any desktop computer you already own to bring up the VirtualBox® edition of Incredible PBX® in less than 60 seconds. If you’ve followed Nerd Vittles over the years, you already know that VirtualBox from Oracle® is one of our favorite platforms. Once VirtualBox is installed on your desktop computer, adding Incredible PBX is a snap. Download the new Incredible PBX vbox image from SourceForge, double-click on the downloaded image, check the initialize MAC address box, and boom. In less than a minute, your PBX is ready to use.
The really nice thing about playing along today is it won’t cost you a dime to try things out for yourself. And, if you really love it and we think you will, there’s no hidden fee or crippleware to hinder your continued use of Incredible PBX for as long as you like. Of course, the Incredible PBX feature set is included as well which brings you nearly three dozen applications for Asterisk® that will revolutionize your communications platform. Just add your credentials and speech-to-text, voice recognition, and a Siri-like telephony interface are as close as your nearest SIP phone. If you later decide you’d like to migrate your server to an inexpensive cloud-based platform, Incredible Backup and Restore make it a 15-minute turnkey task.
Installing Oracle VM VirtualBox
Oracle’s virtual machine platform inherited from Sun is amazing. It’s not only free, but it’s pure GPL2 code. VirtualBox gives you a virtual machine platform that runs on top of any desktop operating system. In terms of limitations, we haven’t found any. We even tested this on an Atom-based Windows 7 machine with 2GB of RAM, and it worked without a hiccup. So step #1 today is to download one or more of the VirtualBox installers from VirtualBox.org or Oracle.com. Our recommendation is to put all of the 100MB installers on a 4GB thumb drive.1 Then you’ll have everything in one place whenever and wherever you happen to need it. Once you’ve downloaded the software, simply install it onto your favorite desktop machine. Accept all of the default settings, and you’ll be good to go. For more details, here’s a link to the Oracle VM VirtualBox User Manual.
Installing Incredible PBX 13 with VirtualBox
To begin, download the latest Incredible PBX vbox image (2.6 GB) onto your desktop. Incredible PBX 13-13.10 includes all of the very latest FreePBX® 13 modules.
Next, double-click on the Incredible PBX .ova image on your desktop. Be sure to check the box to initialize the MAC address of the image and then click Import. Once the import is finished, you’ll see a new Incredible PBX virtual machine in the VM List of the VirtualBox Manager Window. Let’s make a couple of one-time adjustments to the Incredible PBX configuration to account for possible differences in sound and network cards on different host machines.
(1) Click once on the Incredible PBX virtual machine in the VM List. Then (2) click the Settings button. In the Audio tab, check the Enable Audio option and choose your sound card. In the Network tab for Adapter 1, check the Enable Network Adapter option. From the Attached to pull-down menu, choose Bridged Adapter. Then select your network card from the Name list. Then click OK. That’s all the configuration that is necessary for Incredible PBX.
Running Incredible PBX in VirtualBox
Once you’ve imported and configured the Incredible PBX Virtual Machine, you’re ready to go. Highlight the Incredible PBX virtual machine in the VM List on the VirtualBox Manager Window and click the Start button. The standard Linux boot procedure will begin and, within a few seconds, you’ll get the familiar Linux login prompt. During the bootstrap procedure, you’ll see a couple of dialogue boxes pop up that explain the keystrokes to move back and forth between your host operating system desktop and your virtual machine. Remember, you still have full access to your desktop computer. Incredible PBX is merely running as a task in a VM window. Always gracefully halt Incredible PBX just as you would on any computer.
Here’s what you need to know. To work in the Incredible PBX virtual machine, just left-click your mouse while it is positioned inside the VM window. To return to your host operating system desktop, press the right Option key on Windows machines or the left Command key on any Mac. For other operating systems, read the dialogue boxes for instructions on moving around. To access the Linux CLI, login as root with the default password: password. Change your passwords immediately by typing: /root/update-passwords.
Setting the Date and Time with VirtualBox
On some platforms, VirtualBox has a nasty habit of mangling the date and time of your virtual machine. Typing date will tell you whether your VM is affected. If it’s a problem, manually set the date and time and then update the hardware clock. Here’s how assuming 01070709 is the month, day, and correct time of your server:
date 01070709 clock -w
Overview of the Initial Asterisk Setup Process
For those new to PBXs, here’s a two paragraph summary of how Voice over IP (VoIP) works. Phones connected to your PBX are registered with Extensions so that they can make and receive calls. When a PBX user picks up a phone and dials a number, an Outbound Route tells the PBX which Trunk to use to place the call based upon established dialing rules. Unless the dialed number is a local extension, a Trunk registered with some service provider accepts the call, and the PBX sends the call to that provider. The provider then routes the call to its destination where the recipient’s phone rings to announce the incoming call. When the recipient picks up the phone, the conversation begins.
Looking at things from the other end, when a caller somewhere in the world wishes to reach you, the caller picks up a telephone and dials a number known as a DID that is assigned to you by a provider with whom you have established service. When the provider receives the call to your DID, it routes the call to your PBX based upon destination information you established with the provider. Your PBX receives the call with information identifying the DID of the call as well as the CallerID name and number of the caller. An Inbound Route on your PBX then determines where to send the call based upon that DID and CallerID information. Typically, a call is routed to an Extension, a group of Extensions known as a Ring Group, or an IVR or AutoAttendant giving the caller choices on routing the call to the desired destination. Once the call is routed to an Extension, the PBX rings the phone registered to that Extension. When you pick up the phone, the conversation begins.
Configuring Asterisk to Support NAT-Based Routing
With a VoIP server, many PBXs and Extensions are housed behind a NAT-based router that is found in most homes and businesses. These routers assign private IP addresses that are not accessible from the Internet. This causes SIP routing headaches because there are actually two legs to every call, one on the private IP address of your server or extension and another on the public Internet with an entirely different IP address. Routers supposedly handle this handoff of the call using Network Address Translation (NAT) and SIP ALG. With Asterisk-based PBXs, we want the PBX itself to handle the NAT chores so it is critically important to do three things when setting up your PBX. First, turn off SIP ALG on every router used by your PBX and every extension connected to your PBX. Second, tell your PBX about your public and private IP address setup. Step #2 is done in the Incredible PBX GUI with a browser. Login as admin and choose Settings:Asterisk SIP Settings. In the NAT Settings section of the form, click Detect Network Settings. Make sure your public and private IP addresses are correctly listed. Then click Submit and reload your dialplan when prompted. Failure to perform BOTH of these steps typically results in calls with one-way audio, i.e. where either you or the called party can’t hear the other party in the conversation. The third rule to remember is to always configure SIP Extensions on your PBX with NAT Mode=YES. This is rarely harmful and failure to configure SIP extensions in this way typically causes one-way audio in calls as well. IAX extensions avoid NAT issues.
Configuring Extensions with Incredible PBX GUI
Extensions are created using the Incredible PBX GUI: Applications:Extensions. Many SIP phones expect extensions to communicate on UDP port 5060. If this is the case with your SIP phone or softphone, then always create Chan_SIP extensions which communicate on UDP 5060. If your SIP phone or softphone provide port flexibility, then you have a choice in the type of SIP extension to create: Chan_SIP or the more versatile PJSIP. Just remember to always configure SIP extensions with NAT Mode=YES in the Advanced tab. If your VoIP phones or softphones support IAX connectivity, you may wish to consider IAX extensions which avoid NAT problems.
When you create a new Extension, a new entry is automatically created in the PBX Internal Directory. If you wish to allow individual users to manage their extensions or use the WebRTC softphone, then you will also have to create a (very) secure password for User Control Panel (UCP) access. Choose Admin:User Management and click on the key icon of the desired extension to assign a password for UCP and WebRTC access.
Configuring SIP Phones with Incredible PBX GUI
SIP phones and softphones typically require three pieces of information: the IP address of your server, the extension number, and the extension password. If you’re using a PJSIP extension, you also will need to change the port to UDP 5061. If your server is behind a NAT-based router, SIP phones also behind the same router need to use the private LAN address rather than the public IP address. If the SIP phones are outside the router protecting the PBX, then use the public IP address and make certain that you also map ports 5060 and 5061 from your router to the private LAN address of your PBX. Beginning with Incredible PBX 13-13.10, you now can make free SIP URI calls worldwide from almost any SIP phone or softphone. Our SIP URI tutorial covers everything you need to know.
The PIAF Forum can provide you with helpful information in choosing high quality SIP phones. Yealink phones are highly recommended with minimal issues. Cisco phones are the most difficult to configure. Insofar as free softphones, we recommend the Zoiper 3 offerings for Windows, Mac, iOS, and Android. Zoiper 5 still is experiencing some growing pains. A key advantage of the Zoiper softphone is it supports IAX extensions which eliminate the NAT issues entirely. On the Mac platform, we also recommend the Telephone app which is available in the App Store. For SRTP communications, use Grandstream Wave.
Configuring Trunks with Incredible PBX GUI
Perhaps the most difficult component to configure in the PBX is the Trunk. Almost every provider has a different way of doing things. We’ve taken some of the torture out of the exercise by providing configuration settings for dozens of providers. All you need to do is edit the desired Trunk (Connectivity:Trunks), change the Disable Trunk entry to No, and insert your credentials in both the PEER Details and Registration string of the SIP Settings Outgoing and Incoming tabs.
UPDATE: Whether your desktop PBX has a static IP address on the Internet or not, you now can take advantage of a terrific Nerd Vittles Skyetel offer of $50 in free service using Skyetel’s just released support for dynamic IP addressing. Start by mapping UDP ports 5060 and 10000-20000 to your server from your router. The firewall settings and Skyetel trunk setups are preconfigured in this VirtualBox image. Once you get this far, you’re ready to install Skyetel’s new dynamic IP address updater. This is required since you never actually register a trunk with Skyetel. Here’s how. Log into your server as root and cd /usr/src
. Then follow this tutorial to put the pieces in place. While this is beta software at this juncture, we have tested it with excellent results. However, if you run into issues, please post your questions on the PIAF Forum. Now jump over to our Skyetel Tutorial to claim your $50 credit and to get your account set up and configured. Effective 10/1/2023, $25/month minimum spend required.
Of course, Incredible PBX comes preconfigured with setups for dozens of other providers that let you register a new trunk on the provider’s server. VoIP.ms (free iNUM), CircleNet, CallCentric (free DID and iNUM), LocalPhone (25¢/mo. iNUM), Future-Nine, AnveoDirect, and V1VoIP are excellent options.2 Most don’t cost you anything unless you make calls. Review our complete SIP tutorial here: Developing a Cost-Effective SIP Strategy.
Configuring Inbound Routes in Incredible PBX GUI
Inbound Routes, as the name implies, are used to direct incoming calls to a specific destination. That destination could be an extension, a ring group, an IVR or AutoAttendant, or even a conference or DISA extension to place outbound calls (hopefully with a very secure password). Inbound Routes can be identified by DID, CallerID number, or both. To create Inbound Routes, choose Connectivity:Inbound Routes and then click Add Inbound Route. Provide at least a Description for the route, a DID to be matched, and the Destination for the incoming calls that match. If you only want certain callers to be able to reach certain extensions, add a CallerID number to your matching criteria. You can add Call Recording and CallerID CNAM Lookups under the Other tab.
Configuring Outbound Routes in Incredible PBX GUI
Outbound Routes serve a couple of purposes. First, they assure that calls placed by users of your PBX are routed out through an appropriate trunk to reach their destination in the least costly manner. Second, they serve as a security mechanism by either blocking or restricting certain calls by requiring a PIN to complete the calls. For example, if you only permit 10-digit calls and route all of those calls out through a specific trunk with a $20 account balance, there is little risk of running up an exorbitant phone bill because of unauthorized calls unless you’ve deposited a lot of money in your account or activated automatic funds replenishment. This raises another important security tip. Never authorize recurring charges on credit cards registered with your VoIP providers and, if possible, place pricing limits on calls with your providers. If a bad guy were to break into your PBX, you don’t want to give the intruder a blank check to make unauthorized calls. And you certainly don’t want to join the $100,000 Phone Bill Club.
To create outbound routes in the Incredible PBX GUI, navigate to Connectivity:Outbound Routes and click Add Outbound Route. In the Route Settings tab, give the Outbound Route a name and choose one or more trunks to use for the outbound calls. In the Dial Patterns tab, specify the dial strings that must be matched to use this Outbound Route. NXXNXXXXXX would require only 10-digit numbers with the first and fourth digits being a number between 2 and 9. Note that Outbound Routes are searched from the top entry to the bottom until there is a match. Make certain that you order your routes correctly and then place test calls watching the Asterisk CLI to make sure the calls are routed as you intended.
Design Methodology for Outbound Routes
There are a million ways to design outbound calling schemes on PBXs with multiple trunks. One of the simplest ways is to use no dial prefix for the primary trunk and then use dialing prefixes such as *1 and *2 for the remaining trunks.
Another outbound calling scheme would be to assign specific DIDs to individual extensions on your PBX. Here you could use NXXNXXXXXX with the 1 Prepend as the Dial Pattern with every Outbound Route and change the Extension Number in the CallerID field of the Dial Pattern. With this setup, you’d need a separate Outbound Route for each group of extensions using a specific trunk on your PBX. Additional dial patterns can be added for each extension designated for a particular trunk. A lower priority Outbound Route then could be added without a CallerID entry to cover extensions that weren’t restricted or specified.
HINT: Keep in mind that Outbound Routes are processed by FreePBX in top-down order. The first route with a matching dial pattern is the trunk that is selected to place the outbound call. No other outbound routes are ever used even if the call fails or the trunk is unavailable. To avoid failed calls, consider adding additional trunks to the Trunk Sequence in every outbound route. In summary, if you have multiple routes with the exact same dial pattern, then the match nearest to the top of the Outbound Route list wins. You can rearrange the order of the outbound routes by dragging them into any sequence desired.
Configuring Incredible PBX for VirtualBox
In order to take advantage of all the Incredible PBX applications, you’ll need to obtain IBM text-to-speech (TTS) and speech-to-text (STT) credentials as well as a (free) Application ID for Wolfram Alpha.
NOV. 1 UPDATE: IBM moved the goal posts effective December 1, 2018:
This Nerd Vittles tutorial will walk you through getting your IBM account set up and obtaining both your TTS and STT credentials. Be sure to write down BOTH sets of credentials which you’ll need in a minute. For home and SOHO use, IBM access and services are FREE even though you must provide a credit card when signing up. The IBM signup process explains their pricing plans.
To use Wolfram Alpha, sign up for a free Wolfram Alpha API account. Just provide your email address and set up a password. It takes less than a minute. Log into your account and click on Get An App ID. Make up a name for your application and write down (and keep secret) your APP-ID code. That’s all there is to getting set up with Wolfram Alpha. If you want to explore costs for commercial use, there are links to let you get more information.
In addition to your Wolfram Alpha APPID, there are two sets of IBM credentials to plug into the Asterisk AGI scripts. Keep in mind that there are different usernames and passwords for the IBM Watson TTS and STT services. The TTS credentials will look like the following: $IBM_username and $IBM_password. The STT credentials look like this: $API_USERNAME and $API_PASSWORD. Don’t mix them up. 🙂
All of the scripts requiring credentials are located in /var/lib/asterisk/agi-bin so switch to that directory after logging into your server as root. Edit each of the following files and insert your TTS credentials in the variables already provided: nv-today2.php, ibmtts.php, and ibmtts2.php. Edit each of the following files and insert your STT credentials in the variables already provided: getquery.sh, getnumber.sh, and getnumber2.sh. Finally, edit 4747 and insert your Wolfram Alpha APPID.
Using Asteridex with Incredible PBX
AsteriDex is a web-based dialer and address book application for Asterisk and Incredible PBX. It lets you store and manage phone numbers of all your friends and business associates in an easy-to-use SQLite3 database. You simply call up the application with your favorite web browser: http://pbx-ip-address/asteridex4/. When you click on a contact that you wish to call, AsteriDex first calls you at extension 701, and then AsteriDex connects you to your contact through another outbound call made using your default outbound trunk that supports numbers in the 1NXXNXXXXXX format.
Taking Incredible PBX for a Test Drive
You can take Incredible PBX on a test drive by dialing D-E-M-O (3366) from any phone connected to your PBX.
With Allison’s Demo IVR, you can choose from the following options:
- 0. Chat with Operator — connects to extension 701
- 1. AsteriDex Voice Dialer – say "Delta Airlines" or "American Airlines" to connect
- 2. Conferencing – log in using 1234 as the conference PIN
- 3. Wolfram Alpha Almanac – say "What planes are flying overhead"
- 4. Lenny – The Telemarketer’s Worst Nightmare
- 5. Today’s News Headlines — courtesy of Yahoo! News
- 6. Weather by ZIP Code – enter any 5-digit ZIP code for today’s weather
- 7. Today in History — courtesy of OnThisDay.com
- 8. Chat with Nerd Uno — courtesy of SIP URI connection to 3CX iPhone Client
- 9. DISA Voice Dialer — say any 10-digit number to be connected
- *. Current Date and Time — courtesy of Incredible PBX
News Flash: Turn Incredible PBX into a Fault-Tolerant HA Platform for $1/Month
Continue Reading: Configuring Extensions, Trunks & Routes
Don’t Miss: Incredible PBX Application User’s Guide covering the 31 Whole Enchilada apps
Originally published: Monday, January 7, 2019 Updated: Sunday, January 20, 2019
Need help with Asterisk? Visit the VoIP-info Forum.
Special Thanks to Our Generous Sponsors
FULL DISCLOSURE: ClearlyIP, Skyetel, Vitelity, DigitalOcean, Vultr, VoIP.ms, 3CX, Sangoma, TelecomsXchange and VitalPBX have provided financial support to Nerd Vittles and our open source projects through advertising, referral revenue, and/or merchandise. As an Amazon Associate and Best Buy Affiliate, we also earn from qualifying purchases. We’ve chosen these providers not the other way around. Our decisions are based upon their corporate reputation and the quality of their offerings and pricing. Our recommendations regarding technology are reached without regard to financial compensation except in situations in which comparable products at comparable pricing are available from multiple sources. In this limited case, we support our sponsors because our sponsors support us.
BOGO Bonaza: Enjoy state-of-the-art VoIP service with a $10 credit and half-price SIP service on up to $500 of Skyetel trunking with free number porting when you fund your Skyetel account. No limits on number of simultaneous calls. Quadruple data center redundancy. $25 monthly minimum spend required. Tutorial and sign up details are here.
The lynchpin of Incredible PBX 2020 and beyond is ClearlyIP components which bring management of FreePBX modules and SIP phone integration to a level never before available with any other Asterisk distribution. And now you can configure and reconfigure your new Incredible PBX phones from the convenience of the Incredible PBX GUI.
VitalPBX is perhaps the fastest-growing PBX offering based upon Asterisk with an installed presence in more than 100 countries worldwide. VitalPBX has generously provided a customized White Label version of Incredible PBX tailored for use with all Incredible PBX and VitalPBX custom applications. Follow this link for a free test drive!
Special Thanks to Vitelity. Vitelity is now Voyant Communications and has halted new registrations for the time being. Our special thanks to Vitelity for their unwavering financial support over many years and to the many Nerd Vittles readers who continue to enjoy the benefits of their service offerings. We will keep everyone posted on further developments.
- Some of our purchase links refer users to Amazon when we find their prices are competitive for the recommended products. Nerd Vittles receives a small referral fee from Amazon to help cover the costs of our blog. We never recommend particular products solely to generate Amazon commissions. However, when pricing is comparable or availability is favorable, we support Amazon because Amazon supports us. [↩]
- Some of our links refer users to sites or service providers when we find their prices are competitive for the recommended products. Nerd Vittles receives a small referral fee from these providers to help cover the costs of our blog. We never recommend particular products solely to generate commissions. [↩]
A Sobering Look at Asterisk and the 2019 VoIP Landscape
Every six months or so we like to gaze into our crystal ball for a quick look at the VoIP landscape. 2018 has been quite the transformative year with the acquisition of Digium® and Asterisk® by Sangoma®. Unfortunately, as we predicted, the Digium layoffs have already begun, and 2019 may only get worse. While we have no inside information, we wouldn’t be surprised to see Digium’s headquarters in Huntsville closed within six months in an effort to balance the books. Part of the problem may be attributable to the terms of the purchase itself. However, we sense there’s a more troubling development. And that is the reality that VoIP is becoming less and less appealing to home users and small businesses as more and more folks migrate purely to cell phones. Those with teenagers already know this transformation is underway. With services such as Google Fi starting at $20 for unlimited calling and texting, it’s difficult to justify VoIP services even at bargain basement prices. Making the cellular switch even more appealing are offers such as a $400 credit with the purchase of an LG G7 smartphone from Google or a free LG G7 with new Sprint service.
What you lose with a pure cellular platform are many of the features that have made PBXs popular in the VoIP space: call routing, text-to-speech and voice recognition applications, conferencing, SPAM call blocking, and much more. But 2018 also was the year that Google finally pulled the plug on free calling through your PBX. Instead, you now have to purchase and configure a $50 OBi200 to continue with Google Voice, and the integration is painful to put it charitably. The demise of Google Voice added one more nail to the free VoIP coffin. And, as many of you know, Vitelity, our long-time platinum sponsor, now has bowed out of the VoIP retail business due to a change in focus from Voyant, the company’s new owner. Finally, our bargain-basement cloud provider for experimentation, HiFormance, appears to have bitten the dust. Details here. Suggestions here. Reminder: "You get what you pay for."
It’s not all bad news for 2019. First, all of the Incredible PBX platforms are still alive and well. And they will remain open source GPL code. Second, we’ve found a terrific new VoIP provider, Skyetel, that will give you a $50 credit so you can kick the tires for a good long while. Effective 10/1/2023, $25/month minimum spend required. Third, if you’re looking for a robust Cloud platform, Digital Ocean still is offering a $100 signup credit for your first 60 days of service, and Incredible PBX runs swimmingly on their $5/month platform with CentOS. Spend another $1 a month, and you get automatic backups of your cloud-based server. It’s cheap insurance for something as important as your phone system.
If you’re like us, you may be getting a little nervous about the future of Asterisk. We’ve already provided a series of articles on FusionPBX for FreeSWITCH. Our original tutorial and the follow-on articles showing how to create voice prompts using IBM Watson and how to create and deploy TTS applications such as news and weather reports are worth a careful read. And, if you consider yourself a pioneer, then you owe it to yourself to try out the FreeSWITCH developers’ new cloud-based platform, SignalWire. Here’s the $55 Promo code that worked for us: ITEXPO2019. That should get you off to a great start. And check out the pricing: U.S. DIDs are $0.08 per month, U.S. Origination rate (incoming) is $0.00325 per minute, U.S. Termination rate (outgoing) is $0.0072 per minute, U.S. SMS Outbound is $0.0009 per message, and U.S. SMS Inbound messages are free. MMS also available. Once verified, you can spoof any CallerID name and number that you own! What’s not to like? Asterisk Trunk setup example available here.
CAUTIONARY NOTE: SignalWire should be considered EXPERIMENTAL SOFTWARE and is not yet suitable for production use.
That should be enough excitement to keep all of you entertained over the holidays. We’re planning a few days off to be with family and friends. Let us be the first to wish each of you a very Merry Christmas. We’re looking forward to an exciting 2019!
Originally published: Monday, December 17, 2018
Need help with Asterisk? Visit the VoIP-info Forum.
Special Thanks to Our Generous Sponsors
FULL DISCLOSURE: ClearlyIP, Skyetel, Vitelity, DigitalOcean, Vultr, VoIP.ms, 3CX, Sangoma, TelecomsXchange and VitalPBX have provided financial support to Nerd Vittles and our open source projects through advertising, referral revenue, and/or merchandise. As an Amazon Associate and Best Buy Affiliate, we also earn from qualifying purchases. We’ve chosen these providers not the other way around. Our decisions are based upon their corporate reputation and the quality of their offerings and pricing. Our recommendations regarding technology are reached without regard to financial compensation except in situations in which comparable products at comparable pricing are available from multiple sources. In this limited case, we support our sponsors because our sponsors support us.
BOGO Bonaza: Enjoy state-of-the-art VoIP service with a $10 credit and half-price SIP service on up to $500 of Skyetel trunking with free number porting when you fund your Skyetel account. No limits on number of simultaneous calls. Quadruple data center redundancy. $25 monthly minimum spend required. Tutorial and sign up details are here.
The lynchpin of Incredible PBX 2020 and beyond is ClearlyIP components which bring management of FreePBX modules and SIP phone integration to a level never before available with any other Asterisk distribution. And now you can configure and reconfigure your new Incredible PBX phones from the convenience of the Incredible PBX GUI.
VitalPBX is perhaps the fastest-growing PBX offering based upon Asterisk with an installed presence in more than 100 countries worldwide. VitalPBX has generously provided a customized White Label version of Incredible PBX tailored for use with all Incredible PBX and VitalPBX custom applications. Follow this link for a free test drive!
Special Thanks to Vitelity. Vitelity is now Voyant Communications and has halted new registrations for the time being. Our special thanks to Vitelity for their unwavering financial support over many years and to the many Nerd Vittles readers who continue to enjoy the benefits of their service offerings. We will keep everyone posted on further developments.