Book Image

FreeSWITCH 1.8

By : Anthony Minessale II, Giovanni Maruzzelli
Book Image

FreeSWITCH 1.8

By: Anthony Minessale II, Giovanni Maruzzelli

Overview of this book

FreeSWITCH is an open source telephony platform designed to facilitate the creation of voice and chat-driven products, scaling from a soft-phone to a PBX and even up to an enterprise-class soft-switch. This book introduces FreeSWITCH to IT professionals who want to build their own telephony system. This book starts with a brief introduction to the latest version of FreeSWITCH. We then move on to the fundamentals and the new features added in version 1.6, showing you how to set up a basic system so you can make and receive phone calls, make calls between extensions, and utilize basic PBX functionality. Once you have a basic system in place, we’ll show you how to add more and more functionalities to it. You’ll learn to deploy the features on the system using unique techniques and tips to make it work better. Also, there are changes in the security-related components, which will affect the content in the book, so we will make that intact with the latest version. There are new support libraries introduced, such as SQLite, OpenSS, and more, which will make FreeSWITCH more efficient and add more functions to it. We’ll cover these in the new edition to make it more appealing for you.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

A brief introduction to NAT


A good way to explain NAT to someone who could absolutely care less about techno-babble would be with an analogy. Think of a giant office building and its mailroom. An employee on the 10th floor sends a package to you by dropping it off at the mailroom on the ground floor. The package is passed on to the Postal service and it arrives at your house. The return address on the package is actually the address of the entire office building and not the tiny office on the 10th floor. Now say you need to return the package. You put it back through the Postal system and it arrives at the building and the employees in the mailroom must figure out where to deliver the package by mapping your name or office number to the location in the building, and then they take it back up to the employee on the 10th floor. The mailroom is like a NAT router because it proxies the mail between the actual Postal system and the one inside the building. The offices are like the LAN addresses...